Magnetic energy release during magnetic reconnection in the magnetotail leads to fast plasma flows transporting thermal energy toward the inner magnetosphere or deep tail. The interaction of such flows with the ambient plasmas is controlled by forces at the flow's leading edge, manifested as a sharp enhancement of the south‐north component of magnetic field there, which has been called the dipolarization front. In this study, we examine the kinetic plasma structure of equatorial magnetic field perturbations observed behind dipolarization fronts. Using statistical observations of dipolarization fronts in the near‐Earth magnetotail by Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms mission, we find sub‐ion scale (scale is below ion gyroradius) magnetic field depressions (magnetic holes), mostly around the equatorial plane, drifting dawnward. They are populated by hot, transversely anisotropic electrons, likely heated around the front. Combining spacecraft observations, analytical estimates, and particle‐in‐cell simulations, we suggest that these holes result from the ballooning/interchange instability at the dipolarization front. They may represent the nonlinear stage of magnetic field perturbations associated with front instability, which trap hot electrons behind the front. We also discuss the possible role of these holes in scattering and heating electrons and ions in the dipolarized magnetotail.
Magnetic flux ropes (MFR) are universal magnetoplasma structures (similar to cylindrical screw pinches) formed in reconnecting current sheets. In particular, MFR with scales from about the ion inertial length to MHD range are widely observed in the Earth magnetosphere. Typical MFR have force-free configuration with the axial magnetic field peaking on the MFR axis, whereas bifurcated MFR with an off-axis peak of the axial magnetic field are observed as well. In the present paper, we develop kinetic models of force-free and bifurcated MFR and determine consistent ion and electron distribution functions. The magnetic field configuration of the force-free MFR represents well-known Gold-Hoyle MFR (uniformly twisted MFR). We show that bifurcated MFR are characterized by the presence of cold and hot current-carrying electrons. The developed models are capable to describe MFR observed in the Earth magnetotail as well as MFR recently observed by Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission at the Earth magnetopause.
One of the most important sources of magnetospheric plasma is particle entry through the distant magnetotail boundary, the nightside magnetopause. This entry mechanism depends on the magnetopause configuration. Off the equator, the strong lobe magnetic field renders the magnetopause a tangential or a rotational discontinuity, and thus the magnetosheath field orientation predominantly controls particle entry through magnetic reconnection. At the equatorial, distant tail magnetopause, however, the magnetic field's control of particle entry is diminished because the plasma beta there is large on both sides of the boundary. Thus, transport there can be significantly different from that at the dayside and off‐equatorial magnetopauses. Using observations from two Acceleration, Reconnection, Turbulence and Electrodynamics of the Moon's Interaction with the Sun probes, we investigate plasma transport mechanisms around the distant equatorial magnetopause. We find that transport occurs as a series of abrupt transitions in density, ion and electron temperatures, and ion kinetic energy of spatial scales as small as a typical plasma sheet ion gyroradius. Analysis of the particle phase space density reveals that an energy‐selection mechanism controls electron transport across the magnetopause, whereas ion transport is likely controlled by spatial diffusion driven by low‐frequency magnetic field fluctuations. We discuss the importance of these fluctuations for the magnetopause structure (e.g., the thickness of the transitions in plasma density, ion and electron temperatures, and ion kinetic energy).
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