论文标题
压缩等离子体在磁场中的行为
Behavior of Compressed Plasmas in Magnetic Fields
论文作者
论文摘要
地球磁层中的等离子体在地磁活性时期受到压缩,并在随后的安静时期内放松。重复的压缩和放松是近地环境中许多血浆动力学和间歇性的起源。可观察到的压缩的表现是血浆表的变薄,当太阳能质量,能量和动量泛滥到磁层中时,导致磁性重新连接。这种现象在各种规模的大小上都富含物理学,这些大小与因果关系相互联系。这在准确地建模物理学时构成了巨大的挑战。大规模过程是流体状的,并且在全球磁流失动力学(MHD)模型中相当捕获,但是在较小的尺度上,造成耗散和放松的尺度较小的模型通常在动力学状态下,这些动态通常是在动力学方面。小规模过程的自洽产生及其对全球等离子体动态的反馈仍然有待充分探索。血浆压缩可以导致扭曲粒子轨道的电磁场的产生,并在MHD框架的范围之外引入新功能,例如,托架性电场,不平等的等离子体漂移和物种的不平等水流以及在陀螺仪中的强烈空间和速度梯度之间的陀螺仪层次的层次分离的等级;通过可测量的排放。我们研究了这种压缩等离子体的行为,并讨论了理解其可测量特征的放松机制以及影响全球等离子体演变的反馈。
Plasma in the earth's magnetosphere is subjected to compression during geomagnetically active periods and relaxation in subsequent quiet times. Repeated compression and relaxation is the origin of much of the plasma dynamics and intermittency in the near-earth environment. An observable manifestation of compression is the thinning of the plasma sheet resulting in magnetic reconnection when the solar wind mass, energy, and momentum floods into the magnetosphere culminating in the spectacular auroral display. This phenomenon is rich in physics at all scale sizes, which are causally interconnected. This poses a formidable challenge in accurately modeling the physics. The large-scale processes are fluid-like and are reasonably well captured in the global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) models, but those in the smaller scales responsible for dissipation and relaxation that feed back to the larger scale dynamics are often in the kinetic regime. The self-consistent generation of the small-scale processes and their feedback to the global plasma dynamics remains to be fully explored. Plasma compression can lead to the generation of electromagnetic fields that distort the particle orbits and introduce new features beyond the purview of the MHD framework, such as ambipolar electric fields, unequal plasma drifts and currents among species, strong spatial and velocity gradients in gyroscale layers separating plasmas of different characteristics, \textit{etc.} These boundary layers are regions of intense activity characterized by emissions that are measurable. We study the behavior of such compressed plasmas and discuss the relaxation mechanisms to understand their measurable signatures as well as their feedback to influence the global scale plasma evolution.