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速報 “ Fast Magnetic Reconnection via Jets and Current Microsheets”. by P. G. Watson & I. J. D. Craig 2003, ApJ, 590, L0000(in press). Abstract. Numerical simulations of highly nonlinear magnetic reconnection provide evidence of ultrathin current microsheets.
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速報“FastMagneticReconnectionviaJetsandCurrentMicrosheets”速報“FastMagneticReconnectionviaJetsandCurrentMicrosheets” by P. G. Watson & I. J. D. Craig 2003, ApJ, 590, L0000(in press)
Abstract • Numerical simulations of highlynonlinear magnetic reconnection provideevidence of ultrathin currentmicrosheets. • These small-scale sheetsare formed by strongjets from aprimary large-scale current layer. • The size ofthe secondary microsheet isdetermined by the resistivity. • Thisscaling suggests that microsheetsmay provide fast reconnectionsites in thesolar corona.
Introduction(1/3) • Fast reconnection occurs in solar corona, in which the reconnection rate is independent of resistivity. • The purpose of the letter is to point out that the exhaust region of a large-scale current layer can provide the external source for small-scale secondary reconnection events.
Introduction(2/3) • Numerical simulations showthat ejecta from theprimary sheet act ratherlike a turbo mechanism,enhancing dissipation by supplyinghigh-pressure collimated jets tosustain the microsheet. Shibata et al. 1994
Introduction(3/3) • The microsheet is very muchsmaller than primary sheet, its length beingcontrolled by the narrowexhaust jet of theprimary current layer. • Suchmicrosheets have the potentialto act as extremelyshort-lived localized sites ofenergy release (e.g., X-ray brightpoints) in magnetically complexplasmas such as thesolar corona.
Reconnection Model • Simulations: Heerikhuisen, Craig & Watson(2000), Watson & Craig(2001), Hirose, Litvinenko, Shibata, Tanuma et al.(in prep.) • Analytic models: Craig & Henton(1995), Craig & Fabling (1996), Craig & Watson(2000)
Craig & Henton 1995 Hirose, Litvinenko, Shibata, Tanuma et al. (in prep.)
The Reconnection Simulations • Initial condition: • Including resistivity and viscousity • Simulation region: -1<x,y<1
Initial Condition Primary current sheet
Results Jet Secondary current sheet Jet
Results • Primary sheet: Fast reconnection Saturation of sheet Sweet-Parker • Secondary sheet: Fast reconnection Typical model α=1, ε=0.3 (Resistivity is uniform: eta=ν=0.0001)
Results(Current) Secondary sheet Primary sheet
Results(J v.s. Time) Secondary sheet Primary sheet
Dependence of Results on Resistivity slow fast fast Much thinner than primary one
Discussion and Conclusions • Secondary (small-scale) current sheet is created by the collision between two reconnection jets. • Fast reconnection can occurs in the secondary sheet even after the fast reconnection stops in the primary one. • Although the bulk of energy release probably occurs in the primary structure, microsheets powered by primary ejecta could well account for localized hot spots within the plasma(e.g., X-ray-bright points associated with solar flares).