Density Enhancements and Voids following Patchy Reconnection
S. E. Guidoni, D. W. Longcope

TL;DR
This paper presents a model of patchy magnetic reconnection showing how reconnected flux tubes create plasma voids and hot regions, with implications for understanding solar phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a simple model demonstrating how localized reconnection leads to elongated plasma voids and hot regions, advancing understanding of plasma dynamics in current sheets.
Findings
Plasma voids can be 30-50% less dense than background.
Hot postshock regions last long and are observable.
Reconnection location can be inferred from emission measures.
Abstract
We show, through a simple patchy reconnection model, that retracting reconnected flux tubes may present elongated regions relatively devoid of plasma, as well as long lasting, dense central hot regions. Reconnection is assumed to happen in a small patch across a Syrovatski\'i (non-uniform) current sheet (CS) with skewed magnetic fields. The background magnetic pressure has its maximum at the center of the CS plane, and decreases toward the edges of the plane. The reconnection patch creates two V-shaped reconnected tubes that shorten as they retract in opposite directions, due to magnetic tension. One of them moves upward toward the top edge of the CS, and the other one moves downward toward the top of the underlying arcade. Rotational discontinuities (RDs) propagate along the legs of the tubes and generate parallel super-sonic flows that collide at the center of the tube. There, gas…
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