3-D magnetic reconnection in colliding laser-produced plasmas

ORAL

Abstract

Recent experiments have demonstrated magnetic reconnection between colliding plasma plumes, where the reconnecting magnetic fields were self-generated in the expanding laser-produced plasmas by the Biermann battery effect. Using fully kinetic 3-D particle in cell simulations, we conduct the first end-to-end simulations of these experiments, including self-consistent magnetic field generation via the Biermann effect through driven magnetic field reconnection. The simulations show rich, temporally and spatially dependent magnetic field reconnection. First, we find fast, vertically-localized “Biermann-mediated reconnection,” an inherently 3-D reconnection mechanism where the sign of the Biermann term reverses in the reconnection layer, destroying incoming flux and reconnecting flux downstream. Reconnection then transitions to fast, collisionless reconnection sustained by the non-gyrotropic pressure tensor. To separate out the role 3-D mechanisms, 2-D simulations are initialized based on reconnection-plane cuts of the 3-D simulations. These simulations demonstrate: (1) suppression of Biermann-mediated reconnection in 2-D; (2) similar efficacy of pressure tensor mechanisms in 2-D and 3-D; and (3) plasmoids develop in the reconnection layer in 2-D, where-as they are suppressed in 3-D.

*Supported by NDSEG Fellowship. This research used resources of the OLCF at ORNL, which is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725.

Authors

  • Jackson Matteucci

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    • Princeton University
  • Will Fox

    • PPPL
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    • Princeton Plasma Phys Lab
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, Princeton University
  • Clement Moissard

    • Ecole normale supérieure de Cachan, France
  • Amitava Bhattacharjee

    • PPPL
    • Princeton University
    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
    • Princeton Plasma Phys Lab