10 research outputs found
Magnetic Reconnection Triggered by the Parker Instability in the Galaxy: Two-Dimensional Numerical Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations and Application to the Origin of X-Ray Gas in the Galactic Halo
We propose the Galactic flare model for the origin of the X-ray gas in the
Galactic halo. For this purpose, we examine the magnetic reconnection triggered
by Parker instability (magnetic buoyancy instability), by performing the
two-dimensional resistive numerical magnetohydrodynamic simulations. As a
result of numerical simulations, the system evolves as following phases: Parker
instability occurs in the Galactic disk. In the nonlinear phase of Parker
instability, the magnetic loop inflates from the Galactic disk into the
Galactic halo, and collides with the anti-parallel magnetic field, so that the
current sheets are created in the Galactic halo. The tearing instability
occurs, and creates the plasmoids (magnetic islands). Just after the plasmoid
ejection, further current-sheet thinning occurs in the sheet, and the anomalous
resistivity sets in. Petschek reconnection starts, and heats the gas quickly in
the Galactic halo. It also creates the slow and fast shock regions in the
Galactic halo. The magnetic field (G), for example, can heat the
gas ( cm) to temperature of K via the
reconnection in the Galactic halo. The gas is accelerated to Alfv\'en velocity
( km s). Such high velocity jets are the evidence of the
Galactic flare model we present in this paper, if the Doppler shift of the
bipolar jet is detected in the Galactic halo. Full size figures are available
at http://www.kwasan.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~tanuma/study/ApJ2002/ApJ2002.htmlComment: 13 pages, 12 figures, uses emulateapj.sty, accepted by Ap
Two-Dimensional MHD Numerical Simulations of Magnetic Reconnection Triggered by A Supernova Shock in Interstellar Medium, Generation of X-Ray Gas in Galaxy
We examine the magnetic reconnection triggered by a supernova (or a point
explosion) in interstellar medium, by performing two-dimensional resistive
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) numerical simulations with high spatial resolution.
We found that the magnetic reconnection starts long after a supernova shock
(fast-mode MHD shock) passes a current sheet. The current sheet evolves as
follows: (i) Tearing-mode instability is excited by the supernova shock, and
the current sheet becomes thin in its nonlinear stage. (ii) The current-sheet
thinning is saturated when the current-sheet thickness becomes comparable to
that of Sweet-Parker current sheet. After that, Sweet-Parker type reconnection
starts, and the current-sheet length increases. (iii) ``Secondary tearing-mode
instability'' occurs in the thin Sweet-Parker current sheet. (iv) As a result,
further current-sheet thinning occurs and anomalous resistivity sets in,
because gas density decreases in the current sheet. Petschek type reconnection
starts and heats interstellar gas. Magnetic energy is released quickly while
magnetic islands are moving in the current sheet during Petschek type
reconnection. The released magnetic energy is determined by the interstellar
magnetic field strength, not energy of initial explosion nor distance to
explosion. We suggest that magnetic reconnection is a possible mechanism to
generate X-ray gas in Galaxy.Comment: 17 pages using emulateapj.sty, 24 figures (4colors), submitted to
ApJ, mpeg simulations and psfiles are available at
http://stesun8.stelab.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~tanuma/apj2000/apj2000.htm
Numerical Examination of the Stability of an Exact Two-dimensional Solution for Flux Pile-up Magnetic Reconnection
The Kelvin--Helmholtz (KH) and tearing instabilities are likely to be
important for the process of fast magnetic reconnection that is believed to
explain the observed explosive energy release in solar flares. Theoretical
studies of the instabilities, however, typically invoke simplified initial
magnetic and velocity fields that are not solutions of the governing
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations. In the present study, the stability of a
reconnecting current sheet is examined using a class of exact global MHD
solutions for steady state incompressible magnetic reconnection, discovered by
Craig & Henton. Numerical simulation indicates that the outflow solutions where
the current sheet is formed by strong shearing flows are subject to the KH
instability. The inflow solutions where the current sheet is formed by a fast
and weakly sheared inflow are shown to be tearing unstable. Although the
observed instability of the solutions can be interpreted qualitatively by
applying standard linear results for the KH and tearing instabilities, the
magnetic field and plasma flow, specified by the Craig--Henton solution, lead
to the stabilization of the current sheet in some cases. The sensitivity of the
instability growth rate to the global geometry of magnetic reconnection may
help in solving the trigger problem in solar flare research.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. Associated movie files and a PDF
with high-resolution figures are available at
http://www.pha.jhu.edu/~shirose/Craig
Two-dimensional MHD numerical simulations of magnetic reconnection triggered by A Supernova shock in interstellar medium, generation of X-ray gas in galaxy
Submitted to ApJConsiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche - Biblioteca Centrale - P.le Aldo Moro, 7 Rome; International School for Advanced Studies, Via Beirut, 7 Trieste / CNR - Consiglio Nazionale delle RichercheSIGLEITItal