Magnetic Reconnection with Radiative Cooling. I. Optically-Thin Regime
Dmitri A. Uzdensky, Jonathan C. McKinney

TL;DR
This paper develops a simple theoretical model for magnetic reconnection in high-energy astrophysical environments where radiative cooling significantly influences the process, leading to faster reconnection rates due to plasma compression.
Contribution
It introduces a novel Sweet--Parker-like theory incorporating radiative cooling effects into non-relativistic resistive-MHD reconnection, applicable to optically-thin astrophysical regimes.
Findings
Radiative cooling causes plasma compression, increasing reconnection rate.
Lower layer temperature enhances resistivity, further speeding up reconnection.
Derived specific reconnection parameters for bremsstrahlung, cyclotron, and inverse-Compton processes.
Abstract
Magnetic reconnection, a fundamental plasma process associated with a rapid dissipation of magnetic energy, is believed to power many disruptive phenomena in laboratory plasma devices, the Earth magnetosphere, and the solar corona. Traditional reconnection research, geared towards these rather tenuous environments, has justifiably ignored the effects of radiation on the reconnection process. However, in many reconnecting systems in high-energy astrophysics (e.g., accretion-disk coronae, relativistic jets, magnetar flares) and, potentially, in powerful laser plasma and z-pinch experiments, the energy density is so high that radiation, in particular radiative cooling, may start to play an important role. This observation motivates the development of a theory of high-energy-density radiative magnetic reconnection. As a first step towards this goal, we present in this paper a simple…
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