Magnetic instabilities and resulting energy conversion in astrophysics

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2013-08

Authors

Kagan, Daniel Ross

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Abstract

Because the universe is primarily composed of plasma, the interaction of plasmas and magnetic fields is of great importance for astrophysics. In this dissertation, we investigate three magnetic instabilities and examine their possible effects on astrophysical objects. First, we model solar coronal structures as Double Beltrami states, which are the lowest energy equilibria of Hall magnetohydrodynamics. We find that these states can undergo a catastrophe with characteristics similar to those of a solar eruption, such as a flare or coronal mass ejection. We then investigate magnetic reconnection and particle acceleration in moderately magnetized relativistic pair plasmas with three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations of a kinetic-scale current sheet. We find that in three dimensions the tearing instability produces a network of interconnected and interacting magnetic flux ropes. In its nonlinear evolution, the current sheet evolves toward a three-dimensional, disordered state in which the resulting flux rope segments contain magnetic substructure on kinetic scales and sites of temporally and spatially intermittent dissipation. We find that reconnection produces significant particle acceleration, primarily due to the electric field in the X-line regions between flux ropes; the resulting particle energy spectrum can extend to high Lorentz factors. We find that the highest energy particles are moderately beamed within.

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