Kinetic Alfven wave explanation of the Hall fields in magnetic reconnection

Thursday, 13 July 2017: 14:40
Furong Room (Cynn Hotel)
Lei Dai, NSSC National Space Science Center, CAS, Beijing, China, Chi Wang, CSSAR, CAS, Beijing, China, Yongcun Zhang, NSSC National Space Science Center, CAS, SKL of Space Weather, Beijing, China, Benoit Lavraud, IRAP, Toulouse, France, James Burch, Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, TX, United States, Craig J Pollock, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Heliophysics Sci. Div., Greenbelt, MD, United States and Roy B Torbert, University of New Hampshire Main Campus, Durham, NH, United States
Abstract:
Magnetic reconnection is initiated in a small diffusion region but can drive global-scale dynamics in Earth’s magnetosphere, solar flares, and astrophysical systems. Understanding the processes at work in the diffusion region remains a main challenge in space plasma physics. Recent in-situ observations from MMS and THEMIS reveal that the electric field normal to the reconnection current layer, often called the Hall electric field (En), is mainly balanced by the ion pressure gradient. Here we present theoretical explanations indicating that this observation fact is a manifestation of Kinetic Alfven Waves (KAW) physics. The ion pressure gradient represents the finite gyroradius effect of KAW, leading to ion intrusion across the magnetic field lines. Electrons stream along the magnetic field lines to track ions, resulting in field-aligned currents and the associated pattern of the out-of-plane Hall magnetic field (Bm). The ratio En/Bm is on the order of the Alfven speed, as predicted by the KAW theory. The KAW physics further provides new perspectives on how ion intrusion may trigger electric fields suitable for reconnection to occur.