Behavior of Compressed Plasmas in Magnetic Fields
Gurudas Ganguli, Chris Crabtree, Alex Fletcher, Bill Amatucci

TL;DR
This paper investigates how compressed plasmas in Earth's magnetosphere behave and relax, emphasizing the importance of small-scale kinetic processes and their impact on global plasma dynamics during geomagnetic activity.
Contribution
It explores the physics of plasma compression and relaxation, highlighting the role of kinetic effects and boundary layers in magnetospheric plasma behavior.
Findings
Identification of boundary layer features during plasma compression
Insights into relaxation mechanisms affecting global plasma dynamics
Measurable signatures of small-scale plasma activity
Abstract
Plasma in the earth's magnetosphere is subjected to compression during geomagnetically active periods and relaxation in subsequent quiet times. Repeated compression and relaxation is the origin of much of the plasma dynamics and intermittency in the near-earth environment. An observable manifestation of compression is the thinning of the plasma sheet resulting in magnetic reconnection when the solar wind mass, energy, and momentum floods into the magnetosphere culminating in the spectacular auroral display. This phenomenon is rich in physics at all scale sizes, which are causally interconnected. This poses a formidable challenge in accurately modeling the physics. The large-scale processes are fluid-like and are reasonably well captured in the global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) models, but those in the smaller scales responsible for dissipation and relaxation that feed back to the larger…
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