We analyze the development and influence of turbulence in three-dimensional
particle-in-cell simulations of guide-field magnetic reconnection at the
magnetopause with parameters based on observations of an electron diffusion
region by the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission. Along the separatrices
the turbulence is a variant of the lower hybrid drift instability (LHDI) that
produces electric field fluctuations with amplitudes much greater than the
reconnection electric field. The turbulence controls the scale length of the
density and current profiles while enabling significant transport across the
magnetopause despite the electrons remaining frozen-in to the magnetic field.
Near the X-line the electrons are not frozen-in and the turbulence, which
differs from the LHDI, makes a significant net contribution to the generalized
Ohm's law through an anomalous viscosity. The characteristics of the turbulence
and associated particle transport are consistent with fluctuation amplitudes in
the MMS observations. However, for this event the simulations suggest that the
MMS spacecraft were not close enough to the core of the electron diffusion
region to identify the region where anomalous viscosity is important