In space plasma, various effects of magnetic reconnection and turbulence
cause the electron motion to significantly deviate from their Larmor orbits.
Collectively these orbits affect the electron velocity distribution function
and lead to the appearance of the "non-gyrotropic" elements in the pressure
tensor. Quantification of this effect has important applications in space and
laboratory plasma, one of which is tracing the electron diffusion region (EDR)
of magnetic reconnection in space observations. Three different measures of
agyrotropy of pressure tensor have previously been proposed, namely,
A∅e, Dng and Q. The multitude of contradictory measures has
caused confusion within the community. We revisit the problem by considering
the basic properties an agyrotropy measure should have. We show that
A∅e, Dng and Q are all defined based on the sum of the
principle minors (i.e. the rotation invariant I2) of the pressure tensor. We
discuss in detail the problems of I2-based measures and explain why they may
produce ambiguous and biased results. We introduce a new measure AG
constructed based on the determinant of the pressure tensor (i.e. the rotation
invariant I3) which does not suffer from the problems of I2-based
measures. We compare AG with other measures in 2 and 3-dimension
particle-in-cell magnetic reconnection simulations, and show that AG can
effectively trace the EDR of reconnection in both Harris and force-free current
sheets. On the other hand, A∅e does not show prominent peaks in
the EDR and part of the separatrix in the force-free reconnection simulations,
demonstrating that A∅e does not measure all the non-gyrotropic
effects in this case, and is not suitable for studying magnetic reconnection in
more general situations other than Harris sheet reconnection.Comment: accepted by Phys. of Plasm