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Kinetic Structure of Phase Space Density Gradients in and around the Electron Diffusion Region of Magnetopause Reconnection

ORAL

Abstract

We present Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) four-spacecraft observations of the spatial gradient term in the electron Vlasov equation measured within the electron diffusion region (EDR) of magnetic reconnection occurring at Earth's magnetopause. We compare the MMS observations to particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of asymmetric reconnection suitable for modeling dayside reconnection. A highly-structured, smile-shaped gradient distribution in ∇fe is discovered that corresponds to demagnetized electron crescent distributions specific to the central EDR. The intricate velocity-space features of the electron gradient distributions found in both the MMS data and the PIC simulations are useful for (1) distinguishing reconnection crescent signatures from non-reconnection diamagnetic crescent distributions that develop more generally at magnetized electron-scale boundary layers, (2) precisely determining the location of the MMS tetrahedron in relation to EDR sub-structures that are otherwise difficult to identify, and (3) understanding how spatial variations in the electron ensemble self-consistently support the reconnection electric field via net contributions to the bulk electron pressure divergence ∇⋅Pe. These results are relevant to recent studies of kinetic entropy and overarching questions in plasma physics research regarding how processes like Landau damping and magnetic reconnection appear to effect irreversible, dissipative phenomena even in the collisionless regime.

Publication: Shuster, J. R., et al. (2023), Velocity-Space Structure of Terms in the Electron Vlasov Equation: MMS Magnetopause Observations and Model Results, in preparation.<br>

Presenters

  • Jason Shuster

    University of New Hampshire

Authors

  • Jason Shuster

    University of New Hampshire

  • Harsha Gurram

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA/GSFC, UMD

  • Naoki Bessho

    University of Maryland, College Park; NASA GSFC

  • Roy Torbert

    University of New Hampshire; Southwest Research Institute

  • Matthew Argall

    University of New Hampshire

  • Kevin Genestreti

    Southwest Research Institute

  • Charles Farrugia

    University of New Hampshire

  • Daniel Gershman

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA/GSFC

  • John Dorelli

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

  • Li-Jen Chen

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA/GSFC

  • Jonathan Ng

    University of Maryland

  • Julia Stawarz

    Northumbria university, Northumbria University

  • Dominic Payne

    Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics, University of Maryland

  • Arya S Afshari

    University of Iowa

  • Paul Cassak

    West Virginia University, Department of Physics and Astronomy and the Center for KINETIC Plasma Physics, West Virginia University

  • Steven Schwartz

    Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Richard Denton

    Dartmouth College

  • Haoming Liang

    University of Maryland, University of Maryland, College Park/NASA GSFC, University of Maryland, College Park

  • Hiroshi Hasegawa

    Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

  • Vadim Uritsky

    Catholic University of America

  • Yi-Hsin Liu

    Dartmouth College

  • James L Burch

    Southwest Research Institute

  • Jaye Verniero

    NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA/GSFC

  • Jason Beedle

    Catholic University of America

  • Steven Heuer

    University of New Hampshire

  • Tyler Metivier

    University of New Hampshire