The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Parker Solar Probe Observations of Magnetic Reconnection Exhausts in Quiescent Plasmas near the Sun

  • Stefan Eriksson,
  • Marc Swisdak,
  • Alfred Mallet,
  • Oksana Kruparova,
  • Roberto Livi,
  • Orlando Romeo,
  • Stuart D. Bale,
  • Justin C. Kasper,
  • Davin E. Larson,
  • Marc Pulupa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad25f0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 965, no. 1
p. 76

Abstract

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Parker Solar Probe observations are analyzed for the presence of reconnection exhausts across current sheets (CSs) within R 0.80 MK plasmas of a fast wind characterized by significant transverse fluctuations rarely support exhausts irrespective of the CS width. Exhaust observations demonstrate the presence of local temperature gradients across several CSs with a higher- Tp plasma on locally closed fields and a lower- Tp plasma on locally open field lines for an interchange-type reconnection. A CS geometry analysis directly supports the property that X-lines bisect the magnetic field rotation θ -angle, whether the fields and plasmas are asymmetric or not, to maximize reconnection rates and available magnetic energy. The CS normal width d _cs distributions suggest that a multiscale reconnection process through nested layers of bifurcated CSs may be responsible for observed power-law distributions beyond the median d _cs ∼ 1000 km with an exponential d _cs distribution present for ion kinetic dissipation scales below this median. Magnetic field shear θ -angles are essentially identical at R < 0.26 and 1 au with medians at θ ∼ 55° near the Sun and θ ∼ 65° at 1 au. In contrast, the tangential flow shear distributions are different near and far from the Sun. A bimodal flow shear angle distribution is present near the Sun with strong shear flow magnitudes. This distribution is modified with radial distance toward a relatively flat distribution of weaker flow shear magnitudes.

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