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  1. Abstract

    The matter in an accretion disk must lose angular momentum when moving radially inwards but how this works has long been a mystery. By calculating the trajectories of individual colliding neutrals, ions, and electrons in a weakly ionized 2D plasma containing gravitational and magnetic fields, we numerically simulate accretion disk dynamics at the particle level. As predicted by Lagrangian mechanics, the fundamental conserved global quantity is the total canonical angular momentum, not the ordinary angular momentum. When the Kepler angular velocity and the magnetic field have opposite polarity, collisions between neutrals and charged particles cause: (i) ions to move radially inwards, (ii) electrons to move radially outwards, (iii) neutrals to lose ordinary angular momentum, and (iv) charged particles to gain canonical angular momentum. Neutrals thus spiral inward due to their decrease of ordinary angular momentum while the accumulation of ions at small radius and accumulation of electrons at large radius produces a radially outward electric field. In 3D, this radial electric field would drive an out-of-plane poloidal current that produces the magnetic forces that drive bidirectional astrophysical jets. Because this neutral angular momentum loss depends only on neutrals colliding with charged particles, it should be ubiquitous. Quantitative scaling of the model using plausible disk density, temperature, and magnetic field strength gives an accretion rate of 3 × 10−8solar mass per year, which is in good agreement with observed accretion rates.

     
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  2. Abstract

    A comprehensive overview of two decades of Caltech experiments relevant to solar corona physics is presented. The extent to which the experiments scale to the solar corona, the basic configurations and operation, and the importance of the magnetic forceJ × Bcommon to all the experiments is discussed. Summaries are given of the various configurations used, the main observations, and interpretations of these observations, including new models developed to provide these interpretations. Topics include observations and explanations for flux rope self‐collimation, axial flows along flux ropes, eruption of arched flux ropes, strapping magnetic fields that inhibit eruption, the torus instability, and effects such as X‐ray emission of a kink‐driven secondary Rayleigh‐Taylor instability.

     
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  3. Abstract

    Whether or not coherent magnetospheric whistler waves play important roles in the pitch‐angle scattering of energetic particles is a crucial question in magnetospheric physics. The interaction of a thermal distribution of energetic particles with coherent whistler waves is thus investigated. The distribution is prescribed by the Maxwell‐Jüttner distribution, which is a relativistic generalization of the Maxwell‐Boltzmann distribution. Coherent whistler waves are modeled by circularly polarized waves propagating parallel to the background magnetic field. It is shown that for parameters relevant to magnetospheric chorus, a significant fraction (1–5%) of the energetic particle population undergoes drastic, nondiffusive pitch‐angle scattering by coherent chorus. The scaling of this fraction with the wave amplitude may also explain the association of relativistic microbursts to large‐amplitude chorus. A much improved condition for large pitch‐angle scattering is presented that is related to, but may or may not include the exact resonance condition depending on the particle's initial conditions. The theory reveals a critical mechanism not contained in the widely used second‐order trapping theory.

     
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