3D Magnetic Null Points Formation and Motion During Reconnection in the Laboratory
POSTER
Abstract
In configurations observed in natural systems, 3D magnetic null points often appear during magnetic reconnection [1]. In the Terrestrial Reconnection Experiment (TREX) implemented at the Wisconsin Plasma Physics Laboratory (WiPPL), magnetic reconnection is studied under controlled conditions in the collisionless regime. The applied configuration includes a cylindrically symmetric reconnection layer imploding onto the central axis of the experiment [2]. The reconnection process ends as the reconnection layer reaches the center axis characterized by the formation of a double null-point configuration. This poster will discuss how the two null points form, the rapid separation along the experimental z-axis, and the energy conversion due to field line shortening. High fidelity B-dot probes are used for collecting magnetic field data that resolve the dynamics at length scales much smaller than the ion skin-depth. The experiment reveals the importance of two-fluid Hall effects yielding both quadrupolar and octopolar structures in the out-of-plane magnetic field.
*This work is supported by US DOE [grant number DE-SC0018266]; and NASA HTIDeS Exploring 3D Col Magnetic Recon [grant number 80NSSC22K0556].
Publication: [1] Priest E, Forbes T. Magnetic Reconnection: MHD Theory and Applications. Cambridge University Press. 2000. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511525087
[2] Gradney P, Egedal J, Barnhill I, et al. Implementation of a drive cylinder for low collisional experiments on magnetic reconnection. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 94, 123503 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0175812
Presenters
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Xinyu Yu
- University of Wisconsin - Madison