skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Scaling of Magnetic Reconnection Electron Bulk Heating in the High-Alfvén-speed and Low-β Regime of Earth’s Magnetotail
Abstract We have surveyed 21 reconnection exhaust events observed by Magnetospheric MultiScale in the low-plasma-βand high-Alfvén-speed regime of the Earth’s magnetotail to investigate the scaling of electron bulk heating produced by reconnection. The ranges of inflow Alfvén speed and inflow electronβecovered by this study are 800–4000 km s−1and 0.001–0.1, respectively, and the observed heating ranges from a few hundred electronvolts to several kiloelectronvolts. We find that the temperature change in the reconnection exhaust relative to the inflow, ΔTe, is correlated with the inflow Alfvén speed,VAx,in, based on the reconnecting magnetic field and the inflow plasma density. Furthermore, ΔTeis linearly proportional to the inflowing magnetic energy per particle, m i V Ax , in 2 , and the best fit to the data produces the empirical relation ΔTe= 0.020 m i V Ax , in 2 , i.e., the electron temperature increase is on average ∼2% of the inflowing magnetic energy per particle. This magnetotail study extends a previous magnetopause reconnection study by two orders of magnitude in both magnetic energy and electronβ, to a regime that is comparable to the solar corona. The validity of the empirical relation over such a large combined magnetopause–magnetotail plasma parameter range ofVA∼ 10–4000 km s−1andβe∼ 0.001–10 suggests that one can predict the magnitude of the bulk electron heating by reconnection in a variety of contexts from the simple knowledge of a single parameter: the Alfvén speed of the ambient plasma.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2109083
PAR ID:
10521636
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
American Astronomical Society
Date Published:
Journal Name:
The Astrophysical Journal
Volume:
954
Issue:
2
ISSN:
0004-637X
Page Range / eLocation ID:
118
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract We survey 20 reconnection outflow events observed by Magnetospheric MultiScale in the low-βand high-Alfvén-speed regime of the Earth’s magnetotail to investigate the scaling of ion bulk heating produced by reconnection. The range of inflow Alfvén speeds (800–4000 km s−1) and inflow ionβ(0.002–1) covered by this study is in a plasma regime that could be applicable to the solar corona and flare environments. We find that the observed ion heating increases with increasing inflow (upstream) Alfvén speed,VA, based on the reconnecting magnetic field and the upstream plasma density. However, ion heating does not increase linearly as a function of available magnetic energy per particle, m i V A 2 . Instead, the heating increases progressively less as m i V A 2 rises. This is in contrast to a previous study using the same data set, which found that electron heating in this high-Alfvén-speed and low-βregime scales linearly with m i V A 2 , with a scaling factor nearly identical to that found for the low-VAand high-βmagnetopause. Consequently, the ion-to-electron heating ratio in reconnection exhausts decreases with increasing upstreamVA, suggesting that the energy partition between ions and electrons in reconnection exhausts could be a function of the available magnetic energy per particle. Finally, we find that the observed difference in ion and electron heating scaling may be consistent with the predicted effects of a trapping potential in the exhaust, which enhances electron heating, but reduces ion heating. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract Magnetic reconnection is often invoked as a source of high-energy particles, and in relativistic astrophysical systems it is regarded as a prime candidate for powering fast and bright flares. We present a novel analytical model—supported and benchmarked with large-scale three-dimensional kinetic particle-in-cell simulations in electron–positron plasmas—that elucidates the physics governing the generation of power-law energy spectra in relativistic reconnection. Particles with Lorentz factorγ≳ 3σ(here,σis the magnetization) gain most of their energy in the inflow region, while meandering between the two sides of the reconnection layer. Their acceleration time is t acc γ η rec 1 ω c 1 20 γ ω c 1 , whereηrec≃ 0.06 is the inflow speed in units of the speed of light andωc=eB0/mcis the gyrofrequency in the upstream magnetic field. They leave the region of active energization aftertesc, when they get captured by one of the outflowing flux ropes of reconnected plasma. We directly measuretescin our simulations and find thattesc∼taccforσ≳ few. This leads to a universal (i.e.,σ-independent) power-law spectrum dN free / d γ γ 1 for the particles undergoing active acceleration, and dN / d γ γ 2 for the overall particle population. Our results help to shed light on the ubiquitous presence of power-law particle and photon spectra in astrophysical nonthermal sources. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract In magnetic reconnection, the ion bulk outflow speed and ion heating have been shown to be set by the available reconnecting magnetic energy, i.e., the energy stored in the reconnecting magnetic field (Br). However, recent simulations, observations, and theoretical works have shown that the released magnetic energy is inhibited by upstream ion plasma betaβi—the relative ion thermal pressure normalized to magnetic pressure based on the reconnecting field—for antiparallel magnetic field configurations. Using kinetic theory and hybrid particle-in-cell simulations, we investigate the effects ofβion guide field reconnection. While previous works have suggested that guide field reconnection is uninfluenced byβi, we demonstrate that the reconnection process is modified and the outflow is reduced for sufficiently large β i > ( B r 2 + B g 2 ) / B r 2 . We develop a theoretical framework that shows that this reduction is consistent with an enhanced exhaust pressure gradient, which reduces the outflow speed as v out 1 / β i . These results apply to systems in which guide field reconnection is embedded in hot plasmas, such as reconnection at the boundary of eddies in fully developed turbulence like the solar wind or the magnetosheath as well as downstream of shocks such as the heliosheath or the mergers of galaxy clusters. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract We present a survey of 1D kinetic particle-in-cell simulations of quasi-parallel nonrelativistic shocks to identify the environments favorable for electron acceleration. We explore an unprecedented range of shock speedsvsh≈ 0.067–0.267c, Alfvén Mach numbers M A = 5 40 , sonic Mach numbers M s = 5 160 , as well as the proton-to-electron mass ratiosmi/me= 16–1836. We find that high Alfvén Mach number shocks can channel a large fraction of their kinetic energy into nonthermal particles, self-sustaining magnetic turbulence and acceleration to larger and larger energies. The fraction of injected particles is ≲0.5% for electrons and ≈1% for protons, and the corresponding energy efficiencies are ≲2% and ≈10%, respectively. The extent of the nonthermal tail is sensitive to the Alfvén Mach number; when M A 10 , the nonthermal electron distribution exhibits minimal growth beyond the average momentum of the downstream thermal protons, independently of the proton-to-electron mass ratio. Acceleration is slow for shocks with low sonic Mach numbers, yet nonthermal electrons still achieve momenta exceeding the downstream thermal proton momentum when the shock Alfvén Mach number is large enough. We provide simulation-based parameterizations of the transition from thermal to nonthermal distribution in the downstream (found at a momentum around p i , e / m i v sh 3 m i , e / m i ), as well as the ratio of nonthermal electron to proton number density. The results are applicable to many different environments and are important for modeling shock-powered nonthermal radiation. 
    more » « less
  5. Abstract We study the linear stability of a planar interface separating two fluids in relative motion, focusing on conditions appropriate for the boundaries of relativistic jets. The jet is magnetically dominated, whereas the ambient wind is gas-pressure-dominated. We derive the most general form of the dispersion relation and provide an analytical approximation of its solution for an ambient sound speed much smaller than the jet Alfvén speedvA, as appropriate for realistic systems. The stability properties are chiefly determined by the angleψbetween the wavevector and the jet magnetic field. Forψ=π/2, magnetic tension plays no role, and our solution resembles the one of a gas-pressure-dominated jet. Here, only sub-Alfvénic jets are unstable ( 0 < M e ( v / v A ) cos θ < 1 , wherevis the shear velocity andθthe angle between the velocity and the wavevector). Forψ= 0, the free energy in the velocity shear needs to overcome the magnetic tension, and only super-Alfvénic jets are unstable ( 1 < M e < ( 1 + Γ w 2 ) / [ 1 + ( v A / c ) 2 Γ w 2 ] , with Γwthe wind adiabatic index). Our results have important implications for the propagation and emission of relativistic magnetized jets. 
    more » « less