Quadrupolar Density Structures in Driven Magnetic Reconnection Experiments with a Guide Field
Magnetic reconnection is a ubiquitous process in plasma physics, driving rapid and energetic events such as coronal mass ejections. Reconnection between magnetic fields with arbitrary shear can be decomposed into an anti-parallel, reconnecting component, and a non-reconnecting guide-field component...
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Zusammenfassung: | Magnetic reconnection is a ubiquitous process in plasma physics, driving
rapid and energetic events such as coronal mass ejections. Reconnection between
magnetic fields with arbitrary shear can be decomposed into an anti-parallel,
reconnecting component, and a non-reconnecting guide-field component which is
parallel to the reconnecting electric field. This guide field modifies the
structure of the reconnection layer and the reconnection rate. We present
results from experiments on the MAIZE pulsed-power generator (500 kA peak
current, 200 ns rise-time) which use two exploding wire arrays, tilted in
opposite directions, to embed a guide field in the plasma flows with a relative
strength $b\equiv B_g/B_{rec}=\text{0, 0.4, or 1}$. The reconnection layers in
these experiments have widths which are less than the ion skin depth,
$d_i=c/\omega_{pi}$, indicating the importance of the Hall term, which
generates a distinctive quadrupolar magnetic field structure along the
separatrices of the reconnection layer. Using laser imaging interferometry, we
observe quadrupolar structures in the line-integrated electron density,
consistent with the interaction of the embedded guide field with the
quadrupolar Hall field. Our measurements extend over much larger length scales
($40 d_i$) at higher $\beta$ ($\sim 1$) than previous experiments, providing an
insight into the global structure of the reconnection layer. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.02556 |