Abstract In magnetic reconnection, the ion bulk outflow speed and ion heating have been shown to be set by the available reconnecting magnetic energy, i.e., the energy stored in the reconnecting magnetic field (Br). However, recent simulations, observations, and theoretical works have shown that the released magnetic energy is inhibited by upstream ion plasma betaβi—the relative ion thermal pressure normalized to magnetic pressure based on the reconnecting field—for antiparallel magnetic field configurations. Using kinetic theory and hybrid particle-in-cell simulations, we investigate the effects ofβion guide field reconnection. While previous works have suggested that guide field reconnection is uninfluenced byβi, we demonstrate that the reconnection process is modified and the outflow is reduced for sufficiently large . We develop a theoretical framework that shows that this reduction is consistent with an enhanced exhaust pressure gradient, which reduces the outflow speed as . These results apply to systems in which guide field reconnection is embedded in hot plasmas, such as reconnection at the boundary of eddies in fully developed turbulence like the solar wind or the magnetosheath as well as downstream of shocks such as the heliosheath or the mergers of galaxy clusters. 
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                            Electron Heating in the Transrelativistic Perpendicular Shocks of Tilted Accretion Flows
                        
                    
    
            Abstract General relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations of black hole tilted disks—where the angular momentum of the accretion flow at large distances is misaligned with respect to the black hole spin—commonly display standing shocks within a few to tens of gravitational radii from the black hole. In GRMHD simulations of geometrically thick, optically thin accretion flows, applicable to low-luminosity sources like Sgr A* and M87*, the shocks have transrelativistic speed, moderate plasma beta (the ratio of ion thermal pressure to magnetic pressure isβpi1∼ 1–8), and low sonic Mach number (the ratio of shock speed to sound speed isMs∼ 1–6). We study such shocks with 2D particle-in-cell simulations, and we quantify the efficiency and mechanisms of electron heating for the special case of preshock magnetic fields perpendicular to the shock direction of propagation. We find that the postshock electron temperatureTe2exceeds the adiabatic expectationTe2,adby an amount , nearly independent of the plasma beta and of the preshock electron-to-ion temperature ratioTe1/Ti1, which we vary from 0.1 to unity. We investigate the heating physics forMs∼ 5–6 and find that electron superadiabatic heating is governed by magnetic pumping atTe1/Ti1= 1, whereas heating byB-parallel electric fields (i.e., parallel to the local magnetic field) dominates atTe1/Ti1= 0.1. Our results provide physically motivated subgrid prescriptions for electron heating at the collisionless shocks seen in GRMHD simulations of black hole accretion flows. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 2010189
- PAR ID:
- 10515384
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.3847
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- The Astrophysical Journal
- Volume:
- 968
- Issue:
- 2
- ISSN:
- 0004-637X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: Article No. 102
- Size(s):
- Article No. 102
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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