Fragmentation of electric currents in the solar corona by plasma flows
Dieter H. Nickeler, Marian Karlicky, Thomas Wiegelmann, Michaela Kraus

TL;DR
This paper investigates how plasma flows induce current fragmentation in the solar corona's magnetic structures, revealing that shear and vortex flows cause filamentation and fine-structures crucial for plasma heating and acceleration during solar eruptions.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical transformation method to study current fragmentation caused by plasma flows in solar flare configurations, highlighting the role of shear flows in current sheet filamentation.
Findings
Current fragmentation occurs at various locations within the magnetic configuration.
Steep gradients of the Alfven Mach number are necessary for current filamentation.
Small-scale structures in plasmoids lead to strong fragmentation.
Abstract
We consider a magnetic configuration consisting of an arcade structure and a detached plasmoid, resulting from a magnetic reconnection process, as is typically found in connection with solar flares. We study spontaneous current fragmentation caused by shear and vortex plasma flows. An exact analytical transformation method was applied to calculate self-consistent solutions of the nonlinear stationary MHD equations. The assumption of incompressible field-aligned flows implies that both the Alfven Mach number and the mass density are constant on field lines. We first calculated nonlinear MHS equilibria with the help of the Liouville method, emulating the scenario of a solar eruptive flare configuration with plasmoids and flare arcade. Then a Mach number profile was constructed that describes the upflow along the open magnetic field lines and implements a vortex flow inside the plasmoid.…
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