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Creators/Authors contains: "Schwartz, Steven J"

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  1. Abstract Magnetic reconnection is a fundamental plasma process that has been studied with analytical theory, numerical simulations, in situ observations, and laboratory experiments for decades. The models that have been established to describe magnetic reconnection often assume a reconnection plane normal to the current sheet in which an antiparallel magnetic field annihilates. The annihilation points, also known as the X-points, form an x -line, which is believed to be perpendicular to the reconnection plane. Recently, a new study using Magnetospheric Multiscale mission observations has challenged our understanding of magnetic reconnection by providing evidence that the x -line is not necessarily orthogonal to the reconnection plane. In this study we report a second nonorthogonal x -line event with similar features as that in the previous case study, supporting that the sheared x -line phenomenon is not an aberrant event. We employ a detailed directional derivative analysis to identify the x -line direction and show that the in-plane reconnection characteristics are well maintained even with a nonorthogonal x -line. In addition, we find the x -line tends to follow the magnetic field on one side of the current sheet, which suggests an asymmetry across the current sheet. We discuss the possibility that the nonorthogonal x -line arises from an interplay between the two aspects of reconnection: the macroscopic magnetic field topology and microscopic particle kinetics. 
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  2. The current state of the art thermal particle measurements in the solar wind are insufficient to address many long standing, fundamental physical processes. The solar wind is a weakly collisional ionized gas experiencing collective effects due to long-range electromagnetic forces. Unlike a collisionally mediated fluid like Earth’s atmosphere, the solar wind is not in thermodynamic or thermal equilibrium. For that reason, the solar wind exhibits multiple particle populations for each particle species. We can mostly resolve the three major electron populations (e.g., core, halo, strahl, and superhalo) in the solar wind. For the ions, we can sometimes separate the proton core from a secondary proton beam and heavier ion species like alpha-particles. However, as the solar wind becomes cold or hot, our ability to separate these becomes more difficult. Instrumental limitations have prevented us from properly resolving features within each ion population. This destroys our ability to properly examine energy budgets across transient, discontinuous phenomena (e.g., shock waves) and the evolution of the velocity distribution functions. Herein we illustrate both the limitations of current instrumentation and why higher resolutions are necessary to properly address the fundamental kinetic physics of the solar wind. This is accomplished by directly comparing to some current solar wind observations with calculations of velocity moments to illustrate the inaccuracy and incompleteness of poor resolution data. 
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