ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

(abridged) Magnetic reconnection is the topological reconfiguration of the magnetic field in a plasma, accompanied by the violent release of energy and particle acceleration. Reconnection is as ubiquitous as plasmas themselves, with solar flares perh aps the most popular example. Over the last few years, the theoretical understanding of magnetic reconnection in large-scale fluid systems has undergone a major paradigm shift. The steady-state model of reconnection described by the famous Sweet-Parker (SP) theory, which dominated the field for ~50 years, has been replaced with an essentially time-dependent, bursty picture of the reconnection layer, dominated by the continuous formation and ejection of multiple secondary islands (plasmoids). Whereas in the SP model reconnection was predicted to be slow, a major implication of this new paradigm is that reconnection in fluid systems is fast (i.e., independent of the Lundquist number), provided that the system is large enough. This conceptual shift hinges on the realization that SP-like current layers are violently unstable to the plasmoid instability - implying, therefore, that such current sheets are super-critically unstable and thus can never form in the first place. This suggests that the formation of a current sheet and the subsequent reconnection process cannot be decoupled, as is commonly assumed. This paper provides an introductory-level overview of the recent developments in reconnection theory and simulations that led to this essentially new framework. We briefly discuss the role played by the plasmoid instability in selected applications, and describe some of the outstanding challenges that remain at the frontier of this subject. Amongst these are the analytical and numerical extension of the plasmoid instability to (i) 3D and (ii) non-MHD regimes. New results are reported in both cases.
A 2D linear theory of the instability of Sweet-Parker (SP) current sheets is developed in the framework of Reduced MHD. A local analysis is performed taking into account the dependence of a generic equilibrium profile on the outflow coordinate. The p lasmoid instability [Loureiro et al, Phys. Plasmas {bf 14}, 100703 (2007)] is recovered, i.e., current sheets are unstable to the formation of a large-wave-number chain of plasmoids ($k_{rm max}Lsheet sim S^{3/8}$, where $k_{rm max}$ is the wave-number of fastest growing mode, $S=Lsheet V_A/eta$ is the Lundquist number, $Lsheet$ is the length of the sheet, $V_A$ is the Alfven speed and $eta$ is the plasma resistivity), which grows super-Alfvenically fast ($gmaxtau_Asim S^{1/4}$, where $gmax$ is the maximum growth rate, and $tau_A=Lsheet/V_A$). For typical background profiles, the growth rate and the wave-number are found to {it increase} in the outflow direction. This is due to the presence of another mode, the Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability, which is triggered at the periphery of the layer, where the outflow velocity exceeds the Alfven speed associated with the upstream magnetic field. The KH instability grows even faster than the plasmoid instability, $gmax tau_A sim k_{rm max} Lsheetsim S^{1/2}$. The effect of viscosity ($ u$) on the plasmoid instability is also addressed. In the limit of large magnetic Prandtl numbers, $Pm= u/eta$, it is found that $gmaxsim S^{1/4}Pm^{-5/8}$ and $k_{rm max} Lsheetsim S^{3/8}Pm^{-3/16}$, leading to the prediction that the critical Lundquist number for plasmoid instability in the $Pmgg1$ regime is $Scritsim 10^4Pm^{1/2}$. These results are verified via direct numerical simulation of the linearized equations, using a new, analytical 2D SP equilibrium solution.
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا