A. F. Rappazzo
University of Delaware
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Featured researches published by A. F. Rappazzo.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
K. T. Osman; William H. Matthaeus; Minping Wan; A. F. Rappazzo
Evidence for nonuniform heating in the solar wind plasma near current sheets dynamically generated by magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence is obtained using measurements from the ACE spacecraft. These coherent structures only constitute 19% of the data, but contribute 50% of the total plasma internal energy. Intermittent heating manifests as elevations in proton temperature near current sheets, resulting in regional heating and temperature enhancements extending over several hours. The number density of non-Gaussian structures is found to be proportional to the mean proton temperature and solar wind speed. These results suggest magnetofluid turbulence drives intermittent dissipation through a hierarchy of coherent structures, which collectively could be a significant source of coronal and solar wind heating.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
A. F. Rappazzo; E. N. Parker
We investigate the dynamical evolution of magnetic fields in closed regions of solar and stellar coronae. To understand under which conditions current sheets form, we examine dissipative and ideal reduced magnetohydrodynamic models in Cartesian geometry, where two magnetic field components are present: the strong guide field B 0, extended along the axial direction, and the dynamical orthogonal field b. Magnetic field lines thread the system along the axial direction that spans the length L and are line-tied at the top and bottom plates. The magnetic field b initially has only large scales, with its gradient (current) length scale of the order of l b . We identify the magnetic intensity threshold b/B 0 ~ l b /L. For values of b below this threshold, field-line tension inhibits the formation of current sheets, while above the threshold they form quickly on fast ideal timescales. In the ideal case, above the magnetic threshold, we show that current sheets thickness decreases in time until it becomes smaller than the grid resolution, with the analyticity strip width δ decreasing at least exponentially, after which the simulations become underresolved.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
A. F. Rappazzo; William H. Matthaeus; David Ruffolo; Sergio Servidio; Marco Velli
Magnetic reconnection at the interface between coronal holes and loops, the so-called interchange reconnection, can release the hotter, denser plasma from magnetically confined regions into the heliosphere, contributing to the formation of the highly variable slow solar wind. The interchange process is often thought to develop at the apex of streamers or pseudo-streamers, near Y- and X-type neutral points, but slow streams with loop composition have been recently observed along fanlike open field lines adjacent to closed regions, far from the apex. However, coronal heating models, with magnetic field lines shuffled by convective motions, show that reconnection can occur continuously in unipolar magnetic field regions with no neutral points: photospheric motions induce a magnetohydrodynamic turbulent cascade in the coronal field that creates the necessary small scales, where a sheared magnetic field component orthogonal to the strong axial field is created locally and can reconnect. We propose that a similar mechanism operates near and around boundaries between open and closed regions inducing a continual stochastic rearrangement of connectivity. We examine a reduced magnetohydrodynamic model of a simplified interface region between open and closed corona threaded by a strong unipolar magnetic field. This boundary is not stationary, becomes fractal, and field lines change connectivity continuously, becoming alternatively open and closed. This model suggests that slow wind may originate everywhere along loop-coronal-hole boundary regions and can account naturally and simply for outflows at and adjacent to such boundaries and for the observed diffusion of slow wind around the heliospheric current sheet.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Anna Tenerani; A. F. Rappazzo; Marco Velli; Fulvia Pucci
This paper studies the growth rate of reconnection instabilities in thin current sheets in the presence of both resistivity and viscosity. In a previous paper, Pucci and Velli (2014), it was argued that at sufficiently high Lundquist number S it is impossible to form current sheets with aspect ratios L/a which scale as
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
A. F. Rappazzo; Marco Velli; Giorgio Einaudi
L/a\sim S^\alpha
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Minping Wan; A. F. Rappazzo; William H. Matthaeus; Sergio Servidio; Sean Oughton
with
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Serena Dalena; A. F. Rappazzo; P. Dmitruk; A. Greco; William H. Matthaeus
\alpha > 1/3
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
R. B. Dahlburg; Giorgio Einaudi; B. D. Taylor; Ignacio Ugarte-Urra; Harry P. Warren; A. F. Rappazzo; Marco Velli
because the growth rate of the tearing mode would then diverge in the ideal limit
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Sergio Servidio; William H. Matthaeus; Minping Wan; D. Ruffolo; A. F. Rappazzo; Sean Oughton
S\rightarrow\infty
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
A. F. Rappazzo; William H. Matthaeus; D. Ruffolo; Marco Velli; Sergio Servidio
. Here we extend their analysis to include the effects of viscosity, (always present in numerical simulations along with resistivity) and which may play a role in the solar corona and other astrophysical environments. A finite Prandtl number allows current sheets to reach larger aspect ratios before becoming rapidly unstable in pile-up type regimes. Scalings with Lundquist and Prandtl numbers are discussed as well as the transition to kinetic reconnection