Reconnection and particle acceleration in interacting flux ropes -- II. 3D effects on test particles in magnetically dominated plasmas
B. Ripperda, O. Porth, C. Xia, R. Keppens

TL;DR
This paper models 3D magnetic flux rope interactions in plasmas, revealing how reconnection accelerates particles and produces non-thermal energy distributions relevant to solar and astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It extends previous 2.5D models to 3D, incorporating realistic conditions to better understand particle acceleration in explosive reconnection events.
Findings
Particles accelerate in current channels and during flux rope tilting and kinking.
Reconnection produces non-thermal energy distributions with slopes depending on resistivity.
Maximum particle energies reach up to 11 MeV for electrons and 1 GeV for protons.
Abstract
We analyze particle acceleration in explosive reconnection events in magnetically dominated proton-electron plasmas. Reconnection is driven by large-scale magnetic stresses in interacting current-carrying flux tubes. Our model relies on development of current-driven instabilities on macroscopic scales. These tilt-kink instabilities develop in an initially force-free equilibrium of repelling current channels. Using MHD methods we study a 3D model of repelling and interacting flux tubes in which we simultaneously evolve test particles, guided by electromagnetic fields obtained from MHD. We identify two stages of particle acceleration; Initially particles accelerate in the current channels, after which the flux ropes start tilting and kinking and particles accelerate due to reconnection processes in the plasma. The explosive stage of reconnection produces non-thermal energy distributions…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
