104 research outputs found
2D Reconstruction of Magnetotail Electron Diffusion Region Measured by MMS
Models for collisionless magnetic reconnection in near-Earth space are distinctly characterized as 2D or 3D. In 2D kinetic models, the frozen-in law for the electron fluid is usually broken by laminar dynamics involving structures set by the electron orbit size, while in 3D models the width of the electron diffusion region is broadened by turbulent effects. We present an analysis of in situ spacecraft observations from the Earth's magnetotail of a fortuitous encounter with an active reconnection region, mapping the observations onto a 2D spatial domain. While the event likely was perturbed by low-frequency 3D dynamics, the structure of the electron diffusion region remains consistent with results from a 2D kinetic simulation. As such, the event represents a unique validation of 2D kinetic, and laminar reconnection models.Peer reviewe
Multi-Spacecraft Measurement of Turbulence within a Magnetic Reconnection Jet
The relationship between magnetic reconnection and plasma turbulence is
investigated using multipoint in-situ measurements from the Cluster spacecraft
within a high-speed reconnection jet in the terrestrial magnetotail. We show
explicitly that work done by electromagnetic fields on the particles,
, has a non-Gaussian distribution and is
concentrated in regions of high electric current density. Hence, magnetic
energy is converted to kinetic energy in an intermittent manner. Furthermore,
we find the higher-order statistics of magnetic field fluctuations generated by
reconnection are characterized by multifractal scaling on magnetofluid scales
and non-Gaussian global scale invariance on kinetic scales. These observations
suggest within the reconnection jet has an analogue
in fluid-like turbulence theory in that it proceeds via coherent structures
generated by an intermittent cascade. This supports the hypothesis that
turbulent dissipation is highly nonuniform, and thus these results could have
far reaching implications for space and astrophysical plasmas.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Kinetic Generation of Whistler Waves in the Turbulent Magnetosheath
The Earth's magnetosheath (MSH) is governed by numerous physical processes which shape the particle velocity distributions and contribute to the heating of the plasma. Among them are whistler waves which can interact with electrons. We investigate whistler waves detected in the quasi-parallel MSH by NASA's Magnetospheric Multiscale mission. We find that the whistler waves occur even in regions that are predicted stable to wave growth by electron temperature anisotropy. Whistlers are observed in ion-scale magnetic minima and are associated with electrons having butterfly-shaped pitch-angle distributions. We investigate in detail one example and, with the support of modeling by the linear numerical dispersion solver Waves in Homogeneous, Anisotropic, Multicomponent Plasmas, we demonstrate that the butterfly distribution is unstable to the observed whistler waves. We conclude that the observed waves are generated locally. The result emphasizes the importance of considering complete 3D particle distribution functions, and not only the temperature anisotropy, when studying plasma wave instabilities.Peer reviewe
Turbulence in Magnetic Reconnection Jets from Injection to Sub-Ion Scales
We investigate turbulence in magnetic reconnection jets in the Earth's
magnetotail using data from the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft. We show
that fully developed turbulence is observed in many reconnection jets. The
observed turbulence develops on the time scale of a few ion gyroperiods,
resulting in intermittent multifractal energy cascade from the characteristic
scale of the jet down to the ion scales. We show that at sub-ion scales, the
fluctuations are close to mono-fractal and predominantly kinetic Alfv\'en
waves. The observed energy transfer rate across the inertial range is the
largest reported for space plasmas so far
Fast Ion Isotropization by Current Sheet Scattering in Magnetic Reconnection Jets
We present a statistical analysis of ion distributions in magnetic
reconnection jets using data from the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft.
Compared with the quiet plasma in which the jet propagates, we often find
anisotropic and non-Maxwellian ion distributions in the plasma jets. We observe
magnetic field fluctuations associated with unstable ion distributions, but the
wave amplitudes are not large enough to scatter ions during the observed travel
time of the jet. We estimate that the phase-space diffusion due to chaotic and
quasi-adiabatic ion motion in the current sheet is sufficiently fast to be the
primary process leading to isotropization
Ion-beam-driven intense electrostatic solitary waves in reconnection jet
Electrostatic solitary waves (ESWs) have been reported inside reconnection jets, but their source and role remain unclear hitherto. Here we present the first observational evidence of ESWs generation by cold ion beams inside the jet, by using high-cadence measurements from the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft in the Earth's magnetotail. Inside the jet, intense ESWs with amplitude up to 30 mV m(-1) and potential up to similar to 7% of the electron temperature are observed in association with accelerated cold ion beams. Instability analysis shows that the ion beams are unstable, providing free energy for the ESWs. The waves are observed to thermalize the beams, thus providing a new channel for ion heating inside the jet. Our study suggests that electrostatic turbulence can play an important role in the jet dynamics.Peer reviewe
Ion Dynamics Across a Low Mach Number Bow Shock
A thorough understanding of collisionless shocks requires knowledge of how
different ion species are accelerated across the shock. We investigate a bow
shock crossing using the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft after a coronal
mass ejection crossed Earth, which led to solar wind consisting of protons,
alpha particles, and singly charge helium ions. The low Mach number of the bow
shock enabled the ions to be distinguished upstream and sometimes downstream of
the shock. Some of the protons are specularly reflected and produce
quasi-periodic fine structures in the velocity distribution functions
downstream of the shock. Heavier ions are shown to transit the shock without
reflection. However, the gyromotion of the heavier ions partially obscures the
fine structure of proton distributions. Additionally, the calculated proton
moments are unreliable when the different ion species are not distinguished by
the particle detector. The need to high time-resolution mass-resolving ion
detectors when investigating collisionless shocks is discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
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