259 research outputs found
Primordial Magnetic Fields and Electroweak Baryogenesis
In this contribution we will shortly review the main mechanism through which
primordial magnetic fields may affect the electroweak baryogenesis. It is shown
that although strong magnetic fields might enhance the strength of the
electroweak phase transition, no benefit is found for baryogenesis once the
effect of the field on the sphaleron rate is taken into account. The possible
role of hypermagnetic helicity for the electroweak baryogenesis is shortly
discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 1 fig. Plenary talk presented at the COSMO99 Conference,
Trieste, Italy, 27 Sept - 3 Oct, 199
CR electrons and positrons: what we have learned in the latest three years and future perspectives
After the PAMELA finding of an increasing positron fraction above 10 GeV, the
experimental evidence for the presence of a new electron and positron spectral
component in the cosmic ray zoo has been recently confirmed by Fermi-LAT. We
show that a simple phenomenological model which assumes the presence of a
primary electron and positron extra component allows a consistent description
of all available data sets. We then describe the most relevant astrophysical
uncertainties which still prevent to determine the electron+positron source
properties from those data and the perspectives of forthcoming experiments.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Proceeding of the 3th ICATPP Conference on
Astroparticle, Particle, Space Physics and Detectors for Physics
Applications, Villa Olmo (Como), 3-7 October 2011
Gyro-induced acceleration of magnetic reconnection
The linear and nonlinear evolution of magnetic reconnection in collisionless
high-temperature plasmas with a strong guide field is analyzed on the basis of
a two-dimensional gyrofluid model. The linear growth rate of the reconnecting
instability is compared to analytical calculations over the whole spectrum of
linearly unstable wave numbers. In the strongly unstable regime (large \Delta
'), the nonlinear evolution of the reconnecting instability is found to undergo
two distinctive acceleration phases separated by a stall phase in which the
instantaneous growth rate decreases. The first acceleration phase is caused by
the formation of strong electric fields close to the X-point due to ion
gyration, while the second acceleration phase is driven by the development of
an open Petschek-like configuration due to both ion and electron temperature
effects. Furthermore, the maximum instantaneous growth rate is found to
increase dramatically over its linear value for decreasing diffusion layers.
This is a consequence of the fact that the peak instantaneous growth rate
becomes weakly dependent on the microscopic plasma parameters if the diffusion
region thickness is sufficiently smaller than the equilibrium magnetic field
scale length. When this condition is satisfied, the peak reconnection rate
asymptotes to a constant value.Comment: Accepted for publication on Physics of Plasma
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