Conversion of Magnetic-Field Energy and Energetic Particles in the Sun and Heliosphere
Three-dimensional oscillatory magnetic reconnection
Date Submitted
2017-04-13 10:01:49
Jonathan Thurgood
D.I. Pontin (Dundee) & J.A. McLaughlin (Northumbria)
Northumbria / Dundee
Magnetic reconnection is an energy release mechanism fundamental to both astrophysical and laboratory plasmas, lying at the heart of phenomena
including solar and stellar flares, geomagnetic substorms and tokamak disruptions in fusion plasmas. Here we detail the dynamic evolution of localised reconnection regions about three-dimensional (3D) magnetic null points by using numerical simulation. We demonstrate for the first time that reconnection triggered by the localised collapse of a 3D null point due to an external MHD wave involves a self-generated oscillation, whereby the current sheet and outflow jets undergo a reconnection reversal process during which back-pressure formation at the jet heads acts to prise open the collapsed field before overshooting the equilibrium into an opposite-polarity configuration.
The discovery that reconnection at fully 3D nulls can proceed naturally in a time-dependent and periodic fashion is suggestive that oscillatory reconnection mechanisms may play a role in explaining periodicity in astrophysical phenomena associated with magnetic reconnection, such as the observed quasi-periodicity of solar and stellar flare emission. Furthermore, we find a consequence of oscillatory reconnection is the generation of a plethora of freely-propagating MHD waves which escape the vicinity of the reconnection region.
Schedule
id
date time
09:00 - 10:30
09:00
Abstract
Three-dimensional oscillatory magnetic reconnection