Abstract

Radiation emitted by nonthermal particles accelerated during relativistic magnetic reconnection is critical for understanding the nonthermal emission in a variety of astrophysical systems, including blazar jets, black hole coronae, pulsars, and magnetars. By means of fully kinetic particle-in-cell simulations, we demonstrate that reconnection-driven particle acceleration imprints an energy-dependent pitch-angle anisotropy and gives rise to broken power laws in both the particle energy spectrum and the pitch-angle anisotropy. The particle distributions depend on the relative strength of the non-reconnecting (guide field) versus the reconnecting component of the magnetic field (B g /B 0) and the lepton magnetization (σ 0). Below the break Lorentz factor γ 0 (injection), the particle energy spectrum is ultra-hard (p < < 1), while above γ 0, the spectral index p > is highly sensitive to B g /B 0. Particles’ velocities align with the magnetic field, reaching minimum pitch angle α at a Lorentz factor controlled by B g /B 0 and σ 0. The energy-dependent pitch-angle anisotropy, evaluated through the mean of of particles at a given energy, exhibits power-law ranges with negative (m <) and positive (m >) slopes below and above , becoming steeper as B g /B 0 increases. The generation of anisotropic pitch-angle distributions has important astrophysical implications. We address their effects on regulating synchrotron luminosity, spectral energy distribution, polarization, particle cooling, the synchrotron burn-off limit, emission beaming, and temperature anisotropy.

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