Self-generated turbulence in magnetic reconnection
Abstract
Classical Sweet-Parker models of reconnection predict that reconnection rates depend inversely on the resistivity, usually parameterized using the dimensionless Lundquist number (). We describe magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations using a static, nested grid that show the development of a three-dimensional instability in the plane of a current sheet between reversing field lines without a guide field. The instability leads to rapid reconnection of magnetic field lines at a rate independent of over at least the range 3.2× 103 3.2 × 105 resolved by the simulations. We find that this instability occurs even for cases with 104 that in our models appear stable to the recently described, two-dimensional, plasmoid instability. Our results suggest that three-dimensional, MHD processes alone produce fast (resistivity independent) reconnection without recourse to kinetic effects or external turbulence. The unstable reconnection layers provide a self-consistent environment in which the extensively studied turbulent reconnection process can occur.
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