Bulletin of the American Physical Society
64th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 67, Number 15
Monday–Friday, October 17–21, 2022; Spokane, Washington
Session SR01: James Clerk Maxwell Prize for Plasma Physics Address: Current Sheets and the Plasmoid Instability: Mediators of Fast Magnetic Reconnection and Turbulence |
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Chair: Miklos Porkolab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Room: Ballroom 100 AB |
Thursday, October 20, 2022 8:00AM - 9:00AM |
SR01.00001: James Clerk Maxwell Prize for Plasma Physics: Current sheets and the plasmoid instability: mediators of fast magnetic reconnection and turbulence Invited Speaker: Amitava Bhattacharjee Current sheets are localized regions of the plasma in which the current density can become singular in the zero-dissipation limit. While the critical role of such structures in mediating fast reconnection and turbulence has been recognized for some time, the universal nature of the plasmoid instability of these structures in high-Lundquist-number plasmas and its role has become a subject of significant interest relatively recently. Enabled by sophisticated computer simulations and analytical theory and tested by experiments, the plasmoid instability has transformed our understanding of magnetic reconnection and inspired new research in space, astrophysical, and laboratory (including fusion and high-energy-density) plasmas. In this talk, I will review the evolution of our understanding in systems where closed field lines exist (such as in a torus) and those where they may not (such as in stellar coronae and compact astrophysical objects where field lines may be line-tied). Even the definition of magnetic reconnection in the latter class of systems remains a contested issue. In turbulent systems characterized by the formation of thin current sheets, the onset of the plasmoid instability is shown to interrupt the inertial range and introduce new power laws for the dissipation range and produce coherent structures that play an essential role in particle acceleration and heating in non-relativistic as well as relativistic regimes. Exascale computers, exploited by state-of-the-art codes, hold the promise of breaking new ground in making predictions in plasma regimes that have been hitherto inaccessible. Despite the progress made in theory and experiment, many open questions remain. Some of them will be discussed. |
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