Resistive instabilities of current sheets in stratified plasmas with a gravitational field
Faisal Sayed, Anna Tenerani, Richard Fitzpatrick

TL;DR
This paper investigates how gravity and density stratification influence magnetic tearing instabilities in current sheets, revealing that unfavorable stratification enhances reconnection while favorable stratification suppresses it, with gravity altering classical instability regimes.
Contribution
It provides a linear stability analysis of current sheets under gravity and stratification, showing how these factors modify tearing mode behavior and transition to gravity-driven modes.
Findings
Unfavorable stratification destabilizes tearing modes.
Favorable stratification suppresses reconnection.
Gravity modifies the classical tearing mode regime.
Abstract
Magnetic reconnection can develop spontaneously via the tearing instability, often invoked to explain disruptive instabilities in fusion devices, solar flares, the generation of periodic density disturbances at the tip of helmet streamers, and flux transfer events at the Earth's dayside magnetopause. However, in many such environments the presence of gravity, magnetic field curvature or other forms of acceleration often result in situations of a heavy-over-light plasma in an effective gravitational field with an embedded current sheet. This paper studies the linear stability of a slab current sheet with respect to reconnecting modes in the presence of a density gradient under the effect of a constant gravitational acceleration. We show that the presence of stratification and gravity modify the properties of the tearing mode instability both in the case of favorable and unfavorable…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Magnetic confinement fusion research
