110 research outputs found
Electron and Ion Heating during Magnetic Reconnection in Weakly Collisional Plasmas
Gyrokinetic simulations of magnetic reconnection are presented to investigate
plasma heating for strongly magnetized, weakly collisional plasmas. For a low
plasma beta case, parallel and perpendicular phase mixing strongly enhance
energy dissipation yielding electron heating. Heating occurs for a long time
period after a dynamical process of magnetic reconnection ended. For a higher
beta case, the ratio of ion to electron dissipation rate increases, suggesting
that ion heating (via phase-mixing) may become an important dissipation channel
in high beta plasmas.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in JPSJ Suppl.
[Proceedings of the 12th Asia Pacific Physics Conference
Magnetohydrodynamic turbulence mediated by reconnection
Magnetic field fluctuations in MHD turbulence can be viewed as current sheets
that are progressively more anisotropic at smaller scales. As suggested by
Loureiro & Boldyrev (2017) and Mallet et al (2017), below a certain critical
thickness such current sheets become tearing-unstable. We propose
that the tearing instability changes the effective alignment of the magnetic
field lines in such a way as to balance the eddy turnover rate at all scales
smaller than . As a result, turbulent fluctuations become
progressively less anisotropic at smaller scales, with the alignment angle
increasing as , where
is the resistive dissipation scale. Here
is the outer scale of the turbulence, is the corresponding Lundquist
number, and {} is a parameter. The resulting Fourier energy
spectrum is , where is
the wavenumber normal to the local mean magnetic field, and the critical scale
is . The simplest model
corresponds to , in which case the predicted scaling formally agrees
with one of the solutions obtained in (Mallet et al 2017) from a discrete
hierarchical model of abruptly collapsing current sheets, an approach different
and complementary to ours. We also show that the reconnection-mediated interval
is non-universal with respect to the dissipation mechanism. Hyper-resistivity
of the form leads (in the simplest case of )
to the different transition scale
and the energy spectrum , where
is the corresponding hyper-resistive Lundquist number.Comment: submitted for publicatio
Role of reconnection in inertial kinetic-Alfvén turbulence
In a weakly collisional, low-electron-beta plasma, large-scale Alfvén turbulence transforms into inertial kinetic-Alfvén turbulence at scales smaller than the ion microscale (gyroscale or inertial scale). We propose that at such kinetic scales, the nonlinear dynamics tends to organize turbulent eddies into thin current sheets, consistent with the existence of two conserved integrals of the ideal equations, energy and helicity. The formation of strongly anisotropic structures is arrested by the tearing instability that sets a critical aspect ratio of the eddies at each scale a in the plane perpendicular to the guide field. This aspect ratio is defined by the balance of the eddy turnover rate and the tearing rate, and varies from (d [subscript]e / a)¹ / ² to d [subscript]e / a depending on the assumed profile of the current sheets. The energy spectrum of the resulting turbulence varies from k -⁸ / ³ to k -³ , and the corresponding spectral anisotropy with respect to the strong background magnetic field from [mathematical equation; see source] to [mathematical equation; see source].NSF (Grant no. NSF PHY-1707272)NASA (Grant no. NASA 80NSSC18K0646)DOE (Grant no. DE-SC0018266)NSF CAREER (Award no. 1654168)NSF-DOE Partnership in Basic Plasma Science and Engineering (Award no. DE-SC0016215
Magnetic Reconnection Onset via Disruption of a Forming Current Sheet by the Tearing Instability
The recent realization that Sweet-Parker current sheets are violently
unstable to the secondary tearing (plasmoid) instability implies that such
current sheets cannot occur in real systems. This suggests that, in order to
understand the onset of magnetic reconnection, one needs to consider the growth
of the tearing instability in a current layer as it is being formed. Such an
analysis is performed here in the context of nonlinear resistive MHD for a
generic time-dependent equilibrium representing a gradually forming current
sheet. It is shown that two onset regimes, single-island and multi-island, are
possible, depending on the rate of current sheet formation. A simple model is
used to compute the criterion for transition between these two regimes, as well
as the reconnection onset time and the current sheet parameters at that moment.
For typical solar corona parameters this model yields results consistent with
observations.Comment: 5 pages, no figures; accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
An experimental platform for pulsed-power driven magnetic reconnection
We describe a versatile pulsed-power driven platform for magnetic reconnection experiments, based on the exploding wire arrays driven in parallel [Suttle et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 225001 (2016)]. This platform produces inherently magnetised plasma flows for the duration of the generator current pulse (250 ns), resulting in a long-lasting reconnection layer. The layer exists for long enough to allow the evolution of complex processes such as plasmoid formation and movement to be diagnosed by a suite of high spatial and temporal resolution laser-based diagnostics. We can access a wide range of magnetic reconnection regimes by changing the wire material or moving the electrodes inside the wire arrays. We present results with aluminium and carbon wires, in which the parameters of the inflows and the layer that forms are significantly different. By moving the electrodes inside the wire arrays, we change how strongly the inflows are driven. This enables us to study both symmetric reconnection in a range of different regimes and asymmetric reconnection.© 2018 Author(s).Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (Grant no. EP/N013379/1)United States. Department of Energy (Award no. DE-F03-02NA00057)United States. Department of Energy (Award no. DE-SC-0001063)NSF-DOE Partnership in Basic Plasma Science and Engineering (Award no. DE-SC0016215
Conditions for up-down asymmetry in the core of tokamak equilibria
A local magnetic equilibrium solution is sought around the magnetic axis in
order to identify the key parameters defining the magnetic-surface's up-down
asymmetry in the core of tokamak plasmas. The asymmetry is found to be
determined essentially by the ratio of the toroidal current density flowing on
axis to the fraction of the external field's odd perturbation that manages to
propagate from the plasma boundary into the core. The predictions are tested
and illustrated first with an analytical Solovev equilibrium and then using
experimentally relevant numerical equilibria. Hollow current-density
distributions, and hence reverse magnetic shear, are seen to be crucial to
bring into the core asymmetry values that are usually found only near the
plasma edge.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, submitted for publicatio
Tearing instability in Alfv\'en and kinetic-Alfv\'en turbulence
Recently, it has been realized that magnetic plasma turbulence and magnetic
field reconnection are inherently related phenomena. Turbulent fluctuations
generate regions of a sheared magnetic field that become unstable to the
tearing instability and reconnection, thus modifying turbulence at the
corresponding scales. In this contribution, we give a brief discussion of some
recent results on tearing-mediated magnetic turbulence. We illustrate the main
ideas of this rapidly developing field of study by concentrating on two
important examples -- magnetohydrodynamic Alfv\'en turbulence and small-scale
kinetic-Alfv\'en turbulence. Due to various potential applications of these
phenomena in space physics and astrophysics, we specifically try not to
overload the text by heavy analytical derivations, but rather present a
qualitative discussion accessible to a non-expert in the theories of turbulence
and reconnection.Comment: A book chapter in AGU Book "Solar and Heliospheric Plasma Structures"
(to appear
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