Particle acceleration in kinetic simulations of non-relativistic magnetic reconnection with different ion-electron mass ratio [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1905.08797


By means of fully kinetic particle-in-cell simulations, we study whether the proton-to-electron mass ratio $m_i/m_e$ influences the energy spectrum and underlying acceleration mechanism during magnetic reconnection. While kinetic simulations are essential for studying particle acceleration during magnetic reconnection, a reduced $m_i/m_e$ is often used to alleviate the demanding computing resources, which leads to artificial scale separation between electron and proton scales. Recent kinetic simulations with high-mass-ratio have suggested new regimes of reconnection, as electron pressure anisotropy develops in the exhaust region and supports extended current layers. In this work, we study whether different $m_i/m_e$ changes the particle acceleration processes by performing a series of simulations with different mass ratio ($m_i/m_e=25-400$) and guide-field strength in a low-$\beta$ plasma. We find that mass ratio does not strongly influence reconnection rate, magnetic energy conversion, ion internal energy gain, plasma energization processes, ion energy spectra, and the acceleration mechanisms for high-energy ions. Simulations with different mass ratios are different in electron acceleration processes, including electron internal energy gain, electron energy spectrum and the acceleration efficiencies for high-energy electrons. We find that high-energy electron acceleration becomes less efficient when the mass ratio gets larger because the \textit{Fermi}-like mechanism associated with particle curvature drift becomes less efficient. These results indicate that when particle curvature drift dominates high-energy particle acceleration, the further the particle kinetic scales are from the magnetic field curvature scales ($\sim d_i$), the weaker the acceleration will be.

Read this paper on arXiv…

X. Li, F. Guo and H. Li
Thu, 23 May 19
5/67

Comments: 28 pages, 10 figures, accepted to ApJ