Diffusive shock acceleration at laser-driven shocks: studying cosmic-ray accelerators in the laboratory

B. Reville*, A. R. Bell, G. Gregori

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)
219 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The non-thermal particle spectra responsible for the emission from many astrophysical systems are thought to originate from shocks via a first order Fermi process otherwise known as diffusive shock acceleration. The same mechanism is also widely believed to be responsible for the production of high energy cosmic rays. With the growing interest in collisionless shock physics in laser produced plasmas, the possibility of reproducing and detecting shock acceleration in controlled laboratory experiments should be considered. The various experimental constraints that must be satisfied are reviewed. It is demonstrated that several currently operating laser facilities may fulfil the necessary criteria to confirm the occurrence of diffusive shock acceleration of electrons at laser produced shocks. Successful reproduction of Fermi acceleration in the laboratory could open a range of possibilities, providing insight into the complex plasma processes that occur near astrophysical sources of cosmic rays.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberARTN 015015
JournalNew Journal of Physics
Volume15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Jan 2013

Keywords

  • GENERATION
  • PARTICLE-ACCELERATION
  • ELECTRON INJECTION
  • ASTROPHYSICAL SHOCKS
  • WAVES
  • QUASI-PERPENDICULAR SHOCKS
  • PLASMA INTERACTION
  • FRONTS
  • CHARGED-PARTICLES
  • MAGNETIC-FIELD

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