The power spectral density of magnetic fluctuations in the solar wind
exhibits several power-law-like frequency ranges with a well defined break
between approximately 0.1 and 1 Hz in the spacecraft frame. The exact
dependence of this break scale on solar wind parameters has been extensively
studied but is not yet fully understood. Recent studies have suggested that
reconnection may induce a break in the spectrum at a "disruption scale"
λD, which may be larger than the fundamental ion kinetic scales,
producing an unusually steep spectrum just below the break. We present a
statistical investigation of the dependence of the break scale on the proton
gyroradius ρi, ion inertial length di, ion sound radius ρs,
proton-cyclotron resonance scale ρc and disruption scale λD as a
function of β⊥i. We find that the steepest spectral indices of
the dissipation range occur when βe is in the range of 0.1-1 and the
break scale is only slightly larger than the ion sound scale (a situation
occurring 41% of the time at 1 AU), in qualitative agreement with the
reconnection model. In this range the break scale shows remarkably good
correlation with λD. Our findings suggest that, at least at low
βe, reconnection may play an important role in the development of the
dissipation range turbulent cascade and causes unusually steep (steeper than
-3) spectral indices.Comment: Accepted in ApJ