211 research outputs found
Corrugation of relativistic magnetized shock waves
As a shock front interacts with turbulence, it develops corrugation which
induces outgoing wave modes in the downstream plasma. For a fast shock wave,
the incoming wave modes can either be fast magnetosonic waves originating from
downstream, outrunning the shock, or eigenmodes of the upstream plasma drifting
through the shock. Using linear perturbation theory in relativistic MHD, this
paper provides a general analysis of the corrugation of relativistic magnetized
fast shock waves resulting from their interaction with small amplitude
disturbances. Transfer functions characterizing the linear response for each of
the outgoing modes are calculated as a function of the magnetization of the
upstream medium and as a function of the nature of the incoming wave.
Interestingly, if the latter is an eigenmode of the upstream plasma, we find
that there exists a resonance at which the (linear) response of the shock
becomes large or even diverges. This result may have profound consequences on
the phenomenology of astrophysical relativistic magnetized shock waves.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures; to appear in Ap
Current-driven filamentation upstream of magnetized relativistic collisionless shocks
The physics of instabilities in the precursor of relativistic collisionless
shocks is of broad importance in high energy astrophysics, because these
instabilities build up the shock, control the particle acceleration process and
generate the magnetic fields in which the accelerated particles radiate. Two
crucial parameters control the micro-physics of these shocks: the magnetization
of the ambient medium and the Lorentz factor of the shock front; as of today,
much of this parameter space remains to be explored. In the present paper, we
report on a new instability upstream of electron-positron relativistic shocks
and we argue that this instability shapes the micro-physics at moderate
magnetization levels and/or large Lorentz factors. This instability is seeded
by the electric current carried by the accelerated particles in the shock
precursor as they gyrate around the background magnetic field. The compensation
current induced in the background plasma leads to an unstable configuration,
with the appearance of charge neutral filaments carrying a current of the same
polarity, oriented along the perpendicular current. This ``current-driven
filamentation'' instability grows faster than any other instability studied so
far upstream of relativistic shocks, with a growth rate comparable to the
plasma frequency. Furthermore, the compensation of the current is associated
with a slow-down of the ambient plasma as it penetrates the shock precursor (as
viewed in the shock rest frame). This slow-down of the plasma implies that the
``current driven filamentation'' instability can grow for any value of the
shock Lorentz factor, provided the magnetization \sigma <~ 10^{-2}. We argue
that this instability explains the results of recent particle-in-cell
simulations in the mildly magnetized regime.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures; to appear in MNRA
Modeling terahertz emissions from energetic electrons and ions in foil targets irradiated by ultraintense femtosecond laser pulses
Terahertz (THz) emissions from fast electron and ion currents driven in
relativistic, femtosecond laser-foil interactions are examined theoretically.
We first consider the radiation from the energetic electrons exiting the
backside of the target. Our kinetic model takes account of the coherent
transition radiation due to these electrons crossing the plasma-vacuum
interface as well as of the synchrotron radiation due to their deflection and
deceleration in the sheath field they set up in vacuum. After showing that both
mechanisms tend to largely compensate each other when all the electrons are
pulled back into the target, we investigate the scaling of the net radiation
with the sheath field strength. We then demonstrate the sensitivity of this
radiation to a percent-level fraction of escaping electrons. We also study the
influence of the target thickness and laser focusing. The same sheath field
that confines most of the fast electrons around the target rapidly sets into
motion the surface ions. We describe the THz emission from these accelerated
ions and their accompanying hot electrons by means of a plasma expansion model
that allows for finite foil size and multidimensional effects. Again, we
explore the dependencies of this radiation mechanism on the laser-target
parameters. Under conditions typical of current ultrashort laser-solid
experiments, we find that the THz radiation from the expanding plasma is much
less energetic -- by one to three orders of magnitude -- than that due to the
early-time motion of the fast electrons
The various manifestations of collisionless dissipation in wave propagation
The propagation of an electrostatic wave packet inside a collisionless and
initially Maxwellian plasma is always dissipative because of the irreversible
acceleration of the electrons by the wave. Then, in the linear regime, the wave
packet is Landau damped, so that in the reference frame moving at the group
velocity, the wave amplitude decays exponentially with time. In the nonlinear
regime, once phase mixing has occurred and when the electron motion is nearly
adiabatic, the damping rate is strongly reduced compared to the Landau one, so
that the wave amplitude remains nearly constant along the characteristics. Yet,
we show here that the electrons are still globally accelerated by the wave
packet, and, in one dimension, this leads to a non local amplitude dependence
of the group velocity. As a result, a freely propagating wave packet would
shrink, and, therefore, so would its total energy. In more than one dimension,
not only does the magnitude of the group velocity nonlinearly vary, but also
its direction. In the weakly nonlinear regime, when the collisionless damping
rate is still significant compared to its linear value, this leads to an
effective defocussing effect which we quantify, and which we compare to the
self-focussing induced by wave front bowing.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
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