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Larmor Electric Field in Symmetric Magnetic Reconnection
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Abstract
The Larmor electric field (LEF) was previously suggested as a signature to identify the diffusion region in asymmetry reconnection. Using 2.5D particle-in-cell simulations, we show that the LEF also exists in symmetric reconnection, manifested as a transient structure upstream of the Hall electric field. The LEF emerges during the rapid growth phase of the reconnection rate and has opposite polarity to the Hall field. The half-width of the current sheet spontaneously decreases to the electron scale as the evolution of reconnection, which gives rise to the LEF. The current sheet later thickens to maintain the fast reconnection rate, which causes the disappearance of the LEF. We further find that the magnitude of LEF is sensitive to the initial half-width current sheet, the background plasma temperature and density, the guide-field strength, and the ion–electron mass ratio. Our results provide new insight into the dynamics around the diffusion region. The LEF can help satellites not only locate the diffusion region but also identify the onset phase of reconnection in the magnetotail.
American Astronomical Society
Title: Larmor Electric Field in Symmetric Magnetic Reconnection
Description:
Abstract
The Larmor electric field (LEF) was previously suggested as a signature to identify the diffusion region in asymmetry reconnection.
Using 2.
5D particle-in-cell simulations, we show that the LEF also exists in symmetric reconnection, manifested as a transient structure upstream of the Hall electric field.
The LEF emerges during the rapid growth phase of the reconnection rate and has opposite polarity to the Hall field.
The half-width of the current sheet spontaneously decreases to the electron scale as the evolution of reconnection, which gives rise to the LEF.
The current sheet later thickens to maintain the fast reconnection rate, which causes the disappearance of the LEF.
We further find that the magnitude of LEF is sensitive to the initial half-width current sheet, the background plasma temperature and density, the guide-field strength, and the ion–electron mass ratio.
Our results provide new insight into the dynamics around the diffusion region.
The LEF can help satellites not only locate the diffusion region but also identify the onset phase of reconnection in the magnetotail.
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