The Sweet-Parker layer in a system that exceeds a critical value of the Lundquist number (S) is unstable to the plasmoid instability. In this paper, a numerical scaling study has been done with an island coalescing system driven by a low level of random noise. In the early stage, a primary Sweet-Parker layer forms between the two coalescing islands. The primary Sweet-Parker layer breaks into multiple plasmoids and even thinner current sheets through multiple levels of cascading if the Lundquist number is greater than a critical value S c ≃ 4 × 10 4 . As a result of the plasmoid instability, the system realizes a fast nonlinear reconnection rate that is nearly independent of S, and is only weakly dependent on the level of noise. The number of plasmoids in the linear regime is found to scales as S 3/8 , as predicted by an earlier asymptotic analysis (Loureiro et al., Phys. Plasmas 14, 100703 (2007)). In the nonlinear regime, the number of plasmoids follows a steeper scaling, and is proportional to S. The thickness and length of current sheets are found to scale as S −1 , and the local current densities of current sheets scale as S −1 . Heuristic arguments are given in support of theses scaling relations.
Differential rotation occurs in conducting flows in accretion disks and planetary cores. In such systems, the magnetorotational instability can arise from coupling Lorentz and centrifugal forces to cause large radial angular momentum fluxes. We present the first experimental observation of the magnetorotational instability. Our system consists of liquid sodium between differentially rotating spheres, with an imposed coaxial magnetic field. We characterize the observed patterns, dynamics, and torque increases, and establish that this instability can occur from a hydrodynamic turbulent background.
A general theory of the onset and development of the plasmoid instability is formulated by means of a principle of least time. The scaling relations for the final aspect ratio, transition time to rapid onset, growth rate, and number of plasmoids are derived and shown to depend on the initial perturbation amplitude (ŵ0), the characteristic rate of current sheet evolution (1/τ ), and the Lundquist number (S). They are not simple power laws, and are proportional to S α τ β [ln f (S, τ,ŵ0)] σ . The detailed dynamics of the instability is also elucidated, and shown to comprise of a period of quiescence followed by sudden growth over a short time scale.The rapid conversion of magnetic energy into plasma particle energy through the process of magnetic reconnection is of great importance in the realm of plasma physics and astrophysics [1][2][3][4]. Sawtooth crashes, magnetospheric substorms, stellar and gamma-ray flares are just a few examples of pheneomena in which magnetic reconnection plays an essential role.In large systems, such as those found in space and astrophysical environments, the potential formation of highly elongated current sheets would result in extremely low reconnection rates, which fail to account for the observed fast energy release rates [5][6][7]. However, such current sheets are subject to a violent linear instability that leads to their breakup, giving rise to a tremendous increase in the reconnection rate that appears to be very weakly dependent on the Lundquist number of the system in the nonlinear regime [8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]. This crucial instability, which serves as a trigger of fast reconnection, is the plasmoid instability [2], thus dubbed as it leads to the formation of plasmoids.In the widely studied Sweet-Parker current sheets, which are characterized by an inverse aspect ratio a/L ∼ S −1/2 , Tajima and Shibata [1], as well as Loureiro et al.[18], have found that the growth rate γ and the wavenumber k of the plasmoid instability obey γτ A ∼ S 1/4 and kL ∼ S 3/8 , where τ A is the Alfvénic timescale based on the length of the current sheet. Since the Lundquist number S is extremely large in most space and astrophysical plasmas [19], the linear growth of the instability turns out to be surprisingly fast, and the number of plasmoids produced is also very high. Other notable works have since followed, which have verified and extended the work on the plasmoid instability in different contexts [20][21][22][23][24].Despite the success of the theory, its limitations soon became evident. For sufficiently high growth rates, Sweet-Parker current sheets cannot be attained as current layers are linearly unstable and disrupt before this state is achieved. In order to bypass this limitation, Pucci and Velli [25] conjectured that current sheets break up when γτ A ∼ 1. Later, Uzdensky and Loureiro [26] considered a similar criterion (γτ = 1) as the end-point of the linear stage of the instability, presenting an appealing but heuristic discussion for the case of a current sheet evolving...
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