Turbulent Reconnection and Its Implications
Alex Lazarian, Gregory L. Eyink, Ethan T. Vishniac, Grzegorz, Kowal

TL;DR
This paper explores how turbulence fundamentally alters magnetic reconnection processes in plasmas, challenging traditional flux freezing notions and linking turbulent reconnection to phenomena like solar flares and cosmic ray acceleration.
Contribution
It presents numerical evidence supporting the Lazarian & Vishniac (1999) turbulent reconnection model and discusses its implications for astrophysical phenomena.
Findings
Turbulence modifies magnetic reconnection, leading to flux diffusion.
Numerical simulations support the Lazarian & Vishniac model.
Turbulent reconnection explains solar flares and cosmic ray acceleration.
Abstract
Magnetic reconnection is a process of magnetic field topology change, which is one of the most fundamental processes in magnetized plasmas. In most astrophysical environments the Reynolds numbers are large and therefore the transition to turbulence is inevitable. This turbulence must be taken into account for any theory of magnetic reconnection, since the initially laminar configurations can transit to the turbulence state, what is demonstrated by 3D high resolution numerical simulations. We discuss ideas of how turbulence can modify reconnection with the focus on the Lazarian & Vishniac (1999) reconnection model and present numerical evidence supporting the model and demonstrate that it is closely connected to the concept of Richardson diffusion and compatible with the Lagrangian dynamics of magnetized fluids. We point out that the Generalized Ohm's Law, that accounts for turbulent…
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