The plasmoid instability during asymmetric inflow magnetic reconnection
Nicholas A. Murphy, Aleida K. Young, Chengcai Shen, Jun Lin, and Lei, Ni

TL;DR
This study investigates how magnetic asymmetry affects the development, dynamics, and rate of plasmoid instability during magnetic reconnection, revealing that asymmetry influences island formation, turbulence, and reconnection efficiency.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation analysis of plasmoid instability under asymmetric inflow conditions, highlighting key differences from symmetric cases.
Findings
Magnetic islands develop preferentially into the weak field region.
Asymmetry causes oblique impact of outflow jets, reducing momentum transfer.
Reconnection rate plateaus at lower values with strong asymmetry.
Abstract
Theoretical studies of the plasmoid instability generally assume that the reconnecting magnetic fields are symmetric. We relax this assumption by performing two-dimensional resistive magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the plasmoid instability during asymmetric inflow magnetic reconnection. Magnetic asymmetry modifies the onset, scaling, and dynamics of this instability. Magnetic islands develop preferentially into the weak magnetic field upstream region. Outflow jets from individual X-points impact plasmoids obliquely rather than directly as in the symmetric case. Consequently, deposition of momentum by the outflow jets into the plasmoids is less efficient, the plasmoids develop net vorticity, and shear flow slows down secondary merging between islands. Secondary merging events have asymmetry along both the inflow and outflow directions. Downstream plasma is more turbulent in cases with…
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