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Title: Multiscale issues in modeling magnetic reconnection


1
Multiscale issues in modeling magnetic
reconnection
  • J. F. Drake
  • University of Maryland
  • IPAM Meeting on Multiscale Problems in Fusion
    Plasmas
  • January 10, 2005

2
Magnetic energy dissipation in the universe
  • The conversion of magnetic energy to heat and
    high speed flows underlies many important
    phenomena in nature
  • solar and stellar flares
  • magnetospheric substorms
  • disruptions in laboratory fusion experiments
  • More generally understanding how magnetic energy
    is dissipated is essential to model the
    generation and dissipation of magnetic field
    energy in astrophysical systems
  • accretion disks
  • stellar dynamos
  • supernova shocks
  • Known systems are characterized by a slow buildup
    of magnetic energy and fast release
  • trigger?
  • mechanism for fast release?
  • Mechanism for the production of energetic
    particles?

3
Magnetic Free Energy
  • A reversed magnetic field is a source of free
    energy
  • Can imagine B simply self-annihilating
  • What happens in a plasma?
  • How does magnetic reconnection work?

4
Frozen-in Condition
  • In an ideal plasma (?0), the fluid moves so that
    the magnetic flux through any fluid element is
    preserved.

5
Energy Release from Squashed Bubble
magnetic tension
  • Magnetic field lines want to become round

6
Energy Release (cont.)
w
L
R
  • Evaluate initial and final magnetic energies
  • use conservation law for ideal motion
  • magnetic flux conserved
  • area for nearly incompressible motion

Wf (w2/L2) Wi ltlt Wi
  • Most of the magnetic energy is released

7
Flow Generation
  • Released magnetic energy is converted into plasma
    flow
  • Alfven time ?A is much shorter than observed
    energy release time

8
Magnetic Reconnection
  • Strong observational support for this general
    picture

9
Resistivity and the multiscale problem
  • The frozen-in condition implies that in an ideal
    plasma (?0) no topological change in the
    magnetic field is possible
  • tubes of magnetic flux are preserved
  • Breaking of magnetic field lines requires
    resistivity or some other dissipation process
  • As in fluid systems, dissipation can only be
    important at small spatial scales
  • Breaking of field lines occurs at very small
    spatial scales where the magnetic field reverses
    ? dissipation region
  • Release of energy in a macroscopic system depends
    on the complex dynamics of a boundary layer
  • Typically kinetic and turbulent
  • Reconnection is inherently a multiscale problem
    whose description is a computational challenge

10
Expulsion of the core temperature during sawteeth
in tokamaks
  • Reconnection is broadly important in fusion
    experiments
  • The sawtooth crash is an important example
  • Periodic expulsion of the plasma from the core of
    tokamaks

Yamada, et al, 1994
11
Characteristic Times
  • Resistive Time
    Alfven Time Release Time
  • Laboratory Tokamaks 1 - 10 sec
    1 ?sec 50 ?sec
  • Solar Flares 104
    years 0.1 sec 20
    min
  • Magnetosphere ?
    100 sec 30
    min

12
Resistive Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) Theory
  • Formation of macroscopic Sweet-Parker layer

V (? /L) CA (?A/?r)1/2 CA ltlt CA
  • Slow reconnection
  • sensitive to resistivity
  • macroscopic nozzle

13
Failure of the MHD model
  • Resistive MHD reconnection rates are too slow to
    explain observations
  • solar flares
  • sawtooth crash
  • magnetospheric substorms
  • Some form of anomalous resistivity is often
    invoked to explain discrepancies
  • strong electron-ion streaming near x-line drives
    turbulence and associated enhanced electron-ion
    drag
  • Non-MHD physics at small spatial scales produces
    fast reconnection
  • coupling to dispersive waves critical
  • Mechanism for strong particle heating during
    reconnection?

14
Role of dispersive waves
  • Coupling to dispersive waves at small scale is
    key to understanding magnetic reconnection
  • rate of reconnection insensitive to the mechanism
    that breaks the frozen-in condition
  • fast reconnection even for large systems
  • no macroscopic nozzle

15
Generalized Ohms Law
  • Electron equation of motion
  • MHD valid at large scales
  • Below c/?pi electron and ion motion decouple
  • electrons frozen-in
  • Whistler and kinetic Alfven waves are dispersive
  • Electron frozen-in condition broken below c/?pe

16
Kinetic Reconnection
  • Ion motion decouples from that of the electrons
    at a distance from the x-line
  • ion outflow width
  • electron current layer and outflow width
  • Whistler and kinetic Alfven waves control the
    dynamics in the inner region

c/?pi
c/?pi
c/?pe
17
GEM Reconnection Challenge
  • National collaboration to explore reconnection
    with a variety of codes
  • MHD, two-fluid, hybrid, full-particle
  • nonlinear tearing mode in a 1-D Harris current
    sheet
  • Bx B0 tanh(z/w)
  • w 0.5 c/?pi
  • Birn, et al., 2001

18
Rates of Magnetic Reconnection
  • Rate of reconnection is the slope of the ? versus
    t curve
  • All models that include the Hall term in Ohms
    law yield essentially identical rates of
    reconnection
  • Consequence of dispersive waves
  • MHD reconnection is too slow by orders of
    magnitude

19
Why is wave dispersion important?
  • Quadratic dispersion character
  • ?? k2

  • Vp k
  • smaller scales have higher velocities
  • weaker dissipation leads to higher outflow speeds
  • flux from x-line vw
  • insensitive to dissipation

20
Fast reconnection in large systems
  • Large scale hybrid simulation (Shay, et al., 1999)
  • Rate of reconnection insensitive to system size
    vi 0.1 CA
  • No large scale nozzle in kinetic reconnection

21
3-D Magnetic Reconnection
  • Turbulence and anomalous resistivity
  • 2-D models produce strong electron streaming
    around the magnetic x-line
  • Can such streams drive turbulence?
  • Electron-ion streaming instability (Buneman)
    evolves into nonlinear state with strong wave
    turbulence
  • Electron scattering produces enhanced
    electron-ion drag, (anomalous resistivity) that
    is sufficient to break magnetic field lines even
    without classical resistivity

22
Observational evidence for turbulence
  • There is strong observational support that the
    dissipation region becomes strongly turbulent
    during reconnection
  • Earths magnetopause
  • broad spectrum of E and B fluctuations
  • Sawtooth crash in laboratory tokamaks
  • strong fluctuations peaked at the x-line
  • Magnetic fluctuations in Magnetic Reconnection
    eXperiment (MRX)

23
3-D Magnetic Reconnection with guide field
  • Particle simulations (PIC) with up to 1.4 billion
    particles
  • Development of strong current layer
  • Current layer becomes turbulent
  • Electron-ion streaming instability (Buneman)
    evolves into electron holes

y
x
24
Turbulence and the formation of electron holes
  • Intense electron beam generates Buneman
    instability
  • nonlinear evolution into electron holes
  • localized regions of depleted electron density
  • Seen in satellite observations in the
    magnetosphere

Ez
z
x
25
Anomalous drag on electrons
  • Parallel electric field scatter electrons
    producing effective drag
  • Average over fluctuations along z direction to
    produce a mean field electron momentum equation
  • correlation between density and electric field
    fluctuations yields drag
  • Normalized electron drag

26
Electron drag due to scattering by parallel
electric fields
  • Drag Dz has complex spatial and temporal
    structure with positive and negative values
  • Sufficient to break magnetic field lines during
    reconnection

y
x
27
The computational challenge
  • Modeling reconnection in plasma systems (solar
    corona, fusion plasmas, the Earths
    magnetosphere) requires the description of the
    dynamics of the largest spatial scales
  • describes the buildup and storage of magnetic
    energy
  • MHD description adequate
  • At the same time must include the dynamics of a
    microscale boundary layer
  • This dissipation region is both kinetic and
    turbulent
  • Modeling the dissipation region
  • Including the coupling to dispersive waves to
    model fast reconnection requires a two-fluid or
    kinetic (PIC, gyrokinetic) description
  • Modeling turbulence and anomalous resistivity
  • Kinetic (PIC) description down to Debye scales
  • Modeling the production of energetic particles
  • Kinetic (PIC) description

28
Range of spatial scales
  • Modeling kinetic turbulence requires even
    smaller spatial scales!!
  • Even AMR codes will not be able to treat such
    disparate scales
  • The development of innovative multiscale
    algorithms for handling
  • such problems is an imperative

29
Conclusions
  • Magnetic reconnection causes an explosive release
    of energy in plasma systems
  • similar to other types of explosions
  • sonic flows
  • a difference is that the explosion is
    non-isotropic
  • Fast reconnection depends critically on the
    coupling to dispersive waves at small scales
  • rate independent of the mechanism which breaks
    the frozen-in condition
  • rate independent of all kinetic scales 0.1 CA
  • rate consistent with observations
  • Modeling magnetic reconnection in a macroscale
    system requires the simultaneous treatment of a
    microscale boundary layer that is both
    collisionless and therefore inherently kinetic
    and turbulent
  • Describing the dynamics is a multiscale challenge

30
Outstanding Issues
  • Onset
  • Structure of slow shocks
  • Electron heating
  • Role of turbulence and anomalous resistivity
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