A magnetic reconnection X-line extending more than 390 Earth radii in the solar wind

Balogh, A.; McComas, D. J.; Reme, H.; Lin, R. P.; Phan, T. D.; Gosling, J. T.; Smith, C. W.; Davis, M. S.; Skoug, R. M.; Øieroset, M.; Lepping, R. P.

United States, France, United Kingdom

Abstract

Magnetic reconnection in a current sheet converts magnetic energy into particle energy, a process that is important in many laboratory, space and astrophysical contexts. It is not known at present whether reconnection is fundamentally a process that can occur over an extended region in space or whether it is patchy and unpredictable in nature. Frequent reports of small-scale flux ropes and flow channels associated with reconnection in the Earth's magnetosphere raise the possibility that reconnection is intrinsically patchy, with each reconnection X-line (the line along which oppositely directed magnetic field lines reconnect) extending at most a few Earth radii (RE), even though the associated current sheets span many tens or hundreds of RE. Here we report three-spacecraft observations of accelerated flow associated with reconnection in a current sheet embedded in the solar wind flow, where the reconnection X-line extended at least 390RE (or 2.5 × 106km). Observations of this and 27 similar events imply that reconnection is fundamentally a large-scale process. Patchy reconnection observed in the Earth's magnetosphere is therefore likely to be a geophysical effect associated with fluctuating boundary conditions, rather than a fundamental property of reconnection. Our observations also reveal, surprisingly, that reconnection can operate in a quasi-steady-state manner even when undriven by the external flow.

2006 Nature
Cluster 264