4.7 Article

Numerical experiments on magnetic reconnection in solar flare and coronal mass ejection current sheets

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 425, Issue 4, Pages 2824-2839

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21625.x

Keywords

instabilities; magnetic reconnection; shock waves; turbulence; Sun: coronal mass ejections (CMEs); Sun: flares

Funding

  1. Program 973 grant [2011CB811403]
  2. NSFC [10873030]
  3. CAS [2011T2J01, 2010Y2JB16, KJCX2-EW-T07]
  4. NASA [NNX11AB61G]
  5. NSF SHINE grant [AGS-1156076]
  6. Directorate For Geosciences
  7. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [1156076] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Magnetic reconnection plays a critical role in energy conversion during solar eruptions. This paper presents a set of magnetohydrodynamic experiments for the magnetic reconnection process in a current sheet (CS) formed in the wake of the rising flux rope. The eruption results from the loss of equilibrium in a magnetic configuration that includes a current-carrying flux rope, representing a pre-existing filament. In order to study the fine structure and micro processes inside the CS, mesh refinement is used to reduce the numerical diffusion. We start with a uniform, explicitly defined resistivity which results in a Lundquist number S = 10(4) in the vicinity of CS. The use of mesh refinement allows the simulation to capture high-resolution features such as plasmoids from the tearing mode and plasmoid instability regions of turbulence and slow-mode shocks. Inside the CS, magnetic reconnection goes through the Sweet-Parker and the fractal stages, and eventually displays a time-dependent Petschek pattern. Our results support the concept of fractal reconnection suggested by Shibata et al. and Shibata & Tanuma, and also suggest that the CS evolves through Sweet-Parker reconnection prior to the fast reconnection stage. For the first time, the detailed features and/or fine structures inside the coronal mass ejection/flare CS in the eruption were investigated in this work.

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