Abstract

The magnetospheric plasma distribution in the vicinity of a pulsar at various inclination angles is investigated using a new relativistic, parallel three-dimensional particle-in-cell (PIC) code DYMPHNA3D. DYMPHNA3D uses a superposition of the electromagnetic fields associated with a rotating magnetized conducting sphere in a vacuum (the pulsar fields) and the electromagnetic fields due to the presence of the magnetospheric plasma surrounding the pulsar (the plasma fields), as the total fields. The plasma is moved self-consistently through the magnetosphere using the PIC methodology. Our initial simulation results are presented here. These showed similar solutions to those obtained from previous numerical simulations, which showed the fundamental plasma distribution in the vicinity of an aligned rotating neutron star to consist of two polar domes and an equatorial torus of trapped nonneutral plasma of the opposite sign. The aligned case being the case in which the inclination angle, α, between the magnetic dipole moment and the rotation axis of the star is zero. Furthermore, our code allows for off-axis simulations and we have found that this plasma distribution collapses into a Quad-Lobe charge-separated nonneutral magnetospheric plasma distribution in the case of an orthogonal rotator. That is, the case in which the magnetic dipole moment is oriented at right angles to the rotation axis of the neutron star, with the plasma remaining trapped close to the stellar surface by the force-free (E B = 0) surfaces. We find that if initialized with a Goldreich-Julian-type distribution, the system is seen to collapse rapidly into these stable Dome-Torus structures.

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