CCAPP Seminar: Martin Lemoine (A&C (CNRS - U. Paris-Cité))

Lemoine Portrait
April 9, 2024
12:00PM - 1:00PM
PRB 4138 & Zoom

Date Range
2024-04-09 12:00:00 2024-04-09 13:00:00 CCAPP Seminar: Martin Lemoine (A&C (CNRS - U. Paris-Cité)) Speaker: Martin Lemoine (APC (CNRS - U. Paris-Cité))Turbulent plasmas as high-energy particle acceleratorsHow magnetized turbulent plasmas can accelerate charged particles to high energies represents a long-standing question with far-reaching implications for high-energy and multi-messenger astrophysics. It indeed goes back to the seminal works of Enrico Fermi (1949, 1954) and nowadays, it is commonly invoked to model the generation of non-thermal particle spectra in a broad variety of astrophysical sites, including extreme, relativistic sources. In particular, it has recently been considered as a possible origin for the high-energy neutrinos seen by Ice Cube in the direction of nearby active galactic nuclei.Our understanding of particle acceleration in turbulent plasmas has known substantial progress in recent years, mostly spurred by large-scale, kinetic numerical simulations. This talk will address those developments and discuss a theoretical picture to describe the physics at play, based on non-resonant interactions between particles and velocity structures. This model, which can be seen as a modern implementation of the original Fermi scenario, appears supported by recent numerical simulations of turbulence in the semi- and fully-relativistic regime. I will discuss those features then conclude with some possible applications and extensions.For Zoom information, please contact the seminar coordinators. PRB 4138 & Zoom Center for Cosmology and AstroParticle Physics (CCAPP) ccapp@osu.edu America/New_York public

Speaker: Martin Lemoine (APC (CNRS - U. Paris-Cité))

Turbulent plasmas as high-energy particle accelerators

How magnetized turbulent plasmas can accelerate charged particles to high energies represents a long-standing question with far-reaching implications for high-energy and multi-messenger astrophysics. It indeed goes back to the seminal works of Enrico Fermi (1949, 1954) and nowadays, it is commonly invoked to model the generation of non-thermal particle spectra in a broad variety of astrophysical sites, including extreme, relativistic sources. In particular, it has recently been considered as a possible origin for the high-energy neutrinos seen by Ice Cube in the direction of nearby active galactic nuclei.

Our understanding of particle acceleration in turbulent plasmas has known substantial progress in recent years, mostly spurred by large-scale, kinetic numerical simulations. This talk will address those developments and discuss a theoretical picture to describe the physics at play, based on non-resonant interactions between particles and velocity structures. This model, which can be seen as a modern implementation of the original Fermi scenario, appears supported by recent numerical simulations of turbulence in the semi- and fully-relativistic regime. I will discuss those features then conclude with some possible applications and extensions.

For Zoom information, please contact the seminar coordinators.

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