Magnetic Reconnection in Extreme Astrophysical Environments
Dmitri A. Uzdensky (University of Colorado - Boulder)

TL;DR
This paper explores magnetic reconnection in high-energy astrophysical environments with extreme magnetic fields, radiation, and quantum effects, highlighting new physical processes and astrophysical phenomena such as magnetar flares and GRB jets.
Contribution
It introduces a novel research direction focusing on reconnection in high-energy density radiative plasmas, incorporating relativistic, radiative, and QED effects, and discusses their astrophysical implications.
Findings
Reconnection layers become highly collisional with copious pair production.
Radiation pressure and cooling dominate the thermodynamics in extreme fields.
New physical regimes alter the traditional understanding of magnetic reconnection.
Abstract
Magnetic reconnection is a basic plasma process of dramatic rearrangement of magnetic topology, often leading to a violent release of magnetic energy. It is important in magnetic fusion and in space and solar physics --- areas that have so far provided the context for most of reconnection research. Importantly, these environments consist just of electrons and ions and the dissipated energy always stays with the plasma. In contrast, in this paper I introduce a new direction of research, motivated by several important problems in high-energy astrophysics --- reconnection in high energy density (HED) radiative plasmas, where radiation pressure and radiative cooling become dominant factors in the pressure and energy balance. I identify the key processes distinguishing HED reconnection: special-relativistic effects; radiative effects (radiative cooling, radiation pressure, and Compton…
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