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Magnetic Reconnection in Astrophysical and Laboratory Plasmas

567

Citations

204

References

2009

Year

TLDR

Magnetic reconnection, a topological rearrangement of magnetic fields that converts magnetic energy into plasma energy, powers astrophysical flares from Earth’s magnetosphere to γ‑ray bursts and is essential for dynamos and large‑scale magnetic self‑organization. The authors review reconnection theory and evidence, introduce how small‑scale structure may develop, and outline key research directions for astrophysical applications, including kinetic modeling, scale interplay, collisionless reconnection in large systems, and flow effects such as turbulence. They emphasize recent two‑fluid physics developments and discuss experiments, observations, and simulations that verify two‑fluid effects, as well as novel environments—line‑tied, relativistic, and partially ionized plasmas—highlighting mechanisms that enable fast reconnection.

Abstract

Magnetic reconnection is a topological rearrangement of magnetic field that converts magnetic energy to plasma energy. Astrophysical flares, from the Earth's magnetosphere to γ-ray bursts and sawtooth crashes in laboratory plasmas, may all be powered by reconnection. Reconnection is essential for dynamos and the large-scale restructuring known as magnetic self-organization. We review reconnection theory and evidence for it. We emphasize recent developments in two-fluid physics, and the experiments, observations, and simulations that verify two-fluid effects. We discuss novel environments such as line-tied, relativistic, and partially ionized plasmas, focusing on mechanisms that make reconnection fast, as observed. Because there is evidence that fast reconnection in astrophysics requires small-scale structure, we briefly introduce how such structure might develop. Several areas merit attention for astrophysical applications: development of a kinetic model of reconnection to enable spectroscopic predictions, better understanding of the interplay between local and global scales, the role of collisionless reconnection in large systems, and the effects of flows, including turbulence.

References

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