Interchange Slip-Running Reconnection and Sweeping SEP Beams
S. Masson, G. Aulanier, E. Pariat, K.-L. Klein

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new 3D reconnection model explaining how solar energetic particles can propagate from non-connected regions to Earth-connected flux tubes via slip-running reconnection at a null point.
Contribution
The study presents a novel 3D magnetohydrodynamics simulation demonstrating continuous slip-running reconnection and its role in particle transport in the solar corona.
Findings
Reconnection occurs continuously along the outer spine.
Extended narrow magnetic flux tubes form at high altitude.
Particles can be injected into distant flux tubes connected to Earth.
Abstract
We present a new model to explain how particles (solar energetic particles; SEPs), accelerated at a reconnection site that is not magnetically connected to the Earth, could eventually propagate along the well-connected open flux tube. Our model is based on the results of a low-beta resistive magnetohydrodynamics simulation of a three-dimensional line-tied and initially current-free bipole, that is embedded in a non-uniform open potential field. The topology of this configuration is that of an asymmetric coronal null-point, with a closed fan surface and an open outer spine. When driven by slow photospheric shearing motions, field lines, initially fully anchored below the fan dome, reconnect at the null point, and jump to the open magnetic domain. This is the standard interchange mode as sketched and calculated in 2D. The key result in 3D is that, reconnected open field lines located in…
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