Kinetic-scale current sheets in near-Sun solar wind: properties, scale-dependent features and reconnection onset
A. Lotekar, I.Y. Vasko, T. Phan, S.D. Bale, T.A. Bowen, J. Halekas,, A.V. Artemyev, Yu. Khotyaintsev, and F.S. Mozer

TL;DR
This study statistically analyzes proton kinetic-scale current sheets in near-Sun solar wind, revealing their properties, scale-dependent features, and conditions for magnetic reconnection onset, based on Parker Solar Probe data.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive statistical characterization of proton kinetic-scale current sheets close to the Sun, highlighting their scale-dependent properties and implications for magnetic reconnection.
Findings
Current sheet thickness ranges from a few to 200 km, typically around 30 km.
Current densities are scale-dependent and do not exceed the Alfvén current density.
Proton kinetic-scale current sheets are produced by turbulence cascade and are conducive to reconnection.
Abstract
We present statistical analysis of 11,200 proton kinetic-scale current sheets (CS) observed by Parker Solar Probe during 10 days around the first perihelion. The CS thickness is in the range from a few to 200 km with the typical value around 30 km, while current densities are in the range from 0.1 to 10\; with the typical value around 0.7\;. These CSs are resolved thanks to magnetic field measurements at 73--290 Samples/s resolution. In terms of proton inertial length , the CS thickness is in the range from about to with the typical value around 2. The magnetic field magnitude does not substantially vary across the CSs and, accordingly, the current density is dominated by the magnetic field-aligned component. The CSs are typically asymmetric with statistically different magnetic field…
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