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The Role of the Parallel Electric Field in Electron‐Scale Dissipation at Reconnecting Currents in the Magnetosheath
Author(s) -
Wilder F. D.,
Ergun R. E.,
Burch J. L.,
Ahmadi N.,
Eriksson S.,
Phan T. D.,
Goodrich K. A.,
Shuster J.,
Rager A. C.,
Torbert R. B.,
Giles B. L.,
Strangeway R. J.,
Plaschke F.,
Magnes W.,
Lindqvist P. A.,
Khotyaintsev Y. V.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9402
pISSN - 2169-9380
DOI - 10.1029/2018ja025529
Subject(s) - magnetosheath , physics , electric field , antiparallel (mathematics) , current sheet , magnetic field , magnetic reconnection , electron , computational physics , magnetopause , field (mathematics) , condensed matter physics , magnetosphere , magnetohydrodynamics , quantum mechanics , mathematics , pure mathematics
Abstract We report observations from the Magnetospheric Multiscale satellites of reconnecting current sheets in the magnetosheath over a range of out‐of‐plane “guide” magnetic field strengths. The currents exhibit nonideal energy conversion in the electron frame of reference, and the events are within the ion diffusion region within close proximity (a few electron skin depths) to the electron diffusion region. The study focuses on energy conversion on the electron scale only. At low guide field (antiparallel reconnection), electric fields and currents perpendicular to the magnetic field dominate the energy conversion. Additionally, electron distributions exhibit significant nongyrotropy. As the guide field increases, the electric field parallel to the background magnetic field becomes increasingly strong, and the electron nongyrotropy becomes less apparent. We find that even with a guide field less than half the reconnecting field, the parallel electric field and currents dominate the dissipation. This suggests that parallel electric fields are more important to energy conversion in reconnection than previously thought and that at high guide field, the physics governing magnetic reconnection are significantly different from antiparallel reconnection.