On the origin of "patchy" energy conversion in electron diffusion regions
Kevin J. Genestreti, Xiaocan Li, Yi-Hsin Liu, James L. Burch, Roy B., Torbert, Stephen A. Fuselier, Takuma Nakamura, Barbara L. Giles, Daniel J., Gershman, Robert E. Ergun, Christopher T. Russell, and Robert J. Strangeway

TL;DR
This study investigates the causes of patchy energy conversion in electron diffusion regions during magnetic reconnection, finding that magnetic field variability correlates with patchiness, especially at the electron scale.
Contribution
The paper identifies the variability of upstream magnetic fields as a key factor in patchy energy conversion, supported by observational data and kinetic simulations.
Findings
Patchiness correlates with magnetic field variability.
Guide field strength and inflow asymmetries are not well correlated.
Secondary X-lines develop due to magnetic field variations.
Abstract
During magnetic reconnection, field lines interconnect in electron diffusion regions (EDRs). In some EDRs the reconnection and energy conversion rates are controlled by a steady out-of-plane electric field. In other EDRs the energy conversion rate is "patchy", with electron-scale large-amplitude positive and negative peaks. We investigate 22 EDRs observed by NASA's Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission in a wide range of conditions to determine the cause of patchy . The patchiness of the energy conversion is quantified and correlated with seven parameters describing various aspects of the asymptotic inflow regions that affect the structure, stability, and efficiency of reconnection. We find that (1) neither the guide field strength nor the asymmetries in the inflow ion pressure, electron pressure, reconnecting magnetic field strength, and…
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.
