Energy Dependence of Electron-Scale Currents and Dissipation During Magnetopause Reconnection
Abstract
We investigate the electron-scale physics of reconnecting current structures observed at the magnetopause during Phase 1B of the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission when the spacecraft separation was less than 10 km. Using single-spacecraft measurements of the current density vector Jplasma = en(vi - ve) enabled by the accuracy of the Fast Plasma Investigation (FPI) electron moments as demonstrated by Phan et al. [2016], we consider perpendicular (J⊥1 and J⊥2) and parallel (J//) currents and their corresponding kinetic electron signatures. These currents can correspond to a variety of structures in the electron velocity distribution functions measured by FPI, including perpendicular and parallel crescents like those first reported by Burch et al. [2016], parallel electron beams, counter-streaming electron populations, or sometimes simply a bulk velocity shift. By integrating the distribution function over only its angular dimensions, we compute energy-dependent 'partial' moments and employ them to characterize the energy dependence of velocities, currents, and dissipation associated with magnetic reconnection diffusion regions caught by MMS. Our technique aids in visualizing and elucidating the plasma energization mechanisms that operate during collisionless reconnection.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFMSM11D2336S
- Keywords:
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- 2723 Magnetic reconnection;
- MAGNETOSPHERIC PHYSICS;
- 2724 Magnetopause and boundary layers;
- MAGNETOSPHERIC PHYSICS;
- 7845 Particle acceleration;
- SPACE PLASMA PHYSICS;
- 7846 Plasma energization;
- SPACE PLASMA PHYSICS