SH33B-2472
Random Interchange of Magnetic Connectivity

Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
William H Matthaeus1, David J Ruffolo2, Sergio Servidio3, Minping Wan1 and Antonio F Rappazzo4, (1)University of Delaware, Newark, DE, United States, (2)Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand, (3)University of Calabria, Cozenza, Italy, (4)Advanced Heliophysics, Pasadena, CA, United States
Abstract:
Magnetic connectivity, the connection between two points along a magnetic field line, has a stochastic character associated with field lines random walking in space due to magnetic fluctuations, but connectivity can also change in time due to dynamical activity [1]. For fluctuations transverse to a strong mean field, this connectivity change be caused by stochastic interchange due to component reconnection. The process may be understood approximately by formulating a diffusion-like Fokker-Planck coefficient [2] that is asymptotically related to standard field line random walk. Quantitative estimates are provided, for transverse magnetic field models and anisotropic models such as reduced magnetohydrodynamics. In heliospheric applications, these estimates may be useful for understanding mixing between open and close field line regions near coronal hole boundaries, and large latitude excursions of connectivity associated with turbulence.

[1] A. F. Rappazzo, W. H. Matthaeus, D. Ruffolo, S. Servidio & M. Velli, ApJL, 758, L14 (2012)

[2] D. Ruffolo & W. Matthaeus, ApJ, 806, 233 (2015)