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Dive into the research topics where A. Le is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Le.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Current sheets and pressure anisotropy in the reconnection exhaust

A. Le; J. Egedal; Jonathan Ng; Homa Karimabadi; J. D. Scudder; V. Roytershteyn; William Scott Daughton; Yi-Hsin Liu

A particle-in-cell simulation shows that the exhaust during anti-parallel reconnection in the collisionless regime contains a current sheet extending 100 inertial lengths from the X line. The current sheet is supported by electron pressure anisotropy near the X line and ion anisotropy farther downstream. Field-aligned electron currents flowing outside the magnetic separatrices feed the exhaust current sheet and generate the out-of-plane, or Hall, magnetic field. Existing models based on different mechanisms for each particle species provide good estimates for the levels of pressure anisotropy. The ion anisotropy, which is strong enough to reach the firehose instability threshold, is also important for overall force balance. It reduces the outflow speed of the plasma.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Phase space structure of the electron diffusion region in reconnection with weak guide fields

Jonathan Ng; J. Egedal; A. Le; William Scott Daughton

Kinetic simulations of magnetic reconnection provide detailed information about the electric and magnetic structure throughout the simulation domain, as well as high resolution profiles of the essential fluid parameters including the electron and ion densities, flows, and pressure tensors. However, the electron distribution function, f(v), within the electron diffusion region becomes highly structured in the three dimensional velocity space and is not well resolved by the data available from the particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. Here, we reconstruct the electron distribution function within the diffusion region at enhanced resolution. This is achieved by tracing electron orbits in the fields taken from PIC simulations back to the inflow region where an analytic form of the magnetized electron distribution is known. For antiparallel reconnection, the analysis reveals the highly structured nature of f(v), with striations corresponding to the number of times electrons have been reflected within the reconne...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Enhanced electron mixing and heating in 3‐D asymmetric reconnection at the Earth's magnetopause

A. Le; William Daughton; Li-Jen Chen; J. Egedal

Electron heating and mixing during asymmetric reconnection are studied with a 3D kinetic simulation that matches plasma parameters from Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft observations of a magnetopause diffusion region. The mixing and heating are strongly enhanced across the magnetospheric separatrix compared to a 2D simulation. The transport of particles across the separatrix in 3D is attributed to lower-hybrid drift turbulence excited at the steep density gradient near the magnetopause. In the 3D simulation (and not the 2D simulation), the electron temperature parallel to the magnetic field within the mixing layer is significantly higher than its upstream value in agreement with the MMS observations.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Observations of electron phase-space holes driven during magnetic reconnection in a laboratory plasma

W. Fox; M. Porkolab; Jan Egedal; N. Katz; A. Le

This work presents detailed experimental observations of electron phase-space holes driven during magnetic reconnection events on the Versatile Toroidal Facility. The holes are observed to travel on the order of or faster than the electron thermal speed, and are of large size scale, with diameter of order 60 Debye lengths. In addition, they have 3D spheroidal structure with approximately unity aspect ratio. We estimate the direct anomalous resistivity due to ion interaction with the holes and find it to be too small to affect the reconnection rate; however, the holes may play a role in reining in a tail of accelerated electrons and they indicate the presence of other processes in the reconnection layer, such as electron energization and electron beam formation.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Electron energization during magnetic island coalescence

A. Le; Homa Karimabadi; J. Egedal; V. Roytershteyn; William Scott Daughton

Radio emission from colliding coronal mass ejection flux ropes in the interplanetary medium suggested the local generation of superthermal electrons. Inspired by those observations, a fully kinetic particle-in-cell simulation of magnetic island coalescence models the magnetic reconnection between islands as a source of energetic electrons. When the islands merge, stored magnetic energy is converted into electron kinetic energy. The simulation demonstrates that a mechanism for electron energization originally applied to open field line reconnection geometries also operates near the reconnection site of merging magnetic islands. The electron heating is highly anisotropic, and it results mainly from an electric field surrounding the reconnection site that accelerates electrons parallel to the magnetic field. A detailed theory predicts the maximum electron energies and how they depend on the plasma parameters. In addition, the global motion of the magnetic islands launches low-frequency waves in the surrounding plasma, which induce large-amplitude, anisotropic fluctuations in the electron temperature.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Simulation and assessment of ion kinetic effects in a direct-drive capsule implosion experiment

A. Le; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Mark J. Schmitt; H. W. Herrmann; S. H. Batha

The first simulations employing a kinetic treatment of both fuel and shell ions to model inertial confinement fusion experiments are presented, including results showing the importance of kinetic physics processes in altering fusion burn. A pair of direct drive capsule implosions performed at the OMEGA facility with two different gas fills of deuterium, tritium, and helium-3 are analyzed. During implosion shock convergence, highly non-Maxwellian ion velocity distributions and separations in the density and temperature amongst the ion species are observed. Diffusion of fuel into the capsule shell is identified as a principal process that degrades fusion burn performance.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Two-stage bulk electron heating in the diffusion region of anti-parallel symmetric reconnection

A. Le; J. Egedal; William Daughton

Electron bulk energization in the diffusion region during anti-parallel symmetric reconnection entails two stages. First, the inflowing electrons are adiabatically trapped and energized by an ambipolar parallel electric field. Next, the electrons gain energy from the reconnection electric field as they undergo meandering motion. These collisionless mechanisms have been described previously, and they lead to highly structured electron velocity distributions. Nevertheless, a simplified control-volume analysis gives estimates for how the net effective heating scales with the upstream plasma conditions in agreement with fully kinetic simulations and spacecraft observations.


Physics of Plasmas | 2017

The role of guide field in magnetic reconnection driven by island coalescence

Adam Stanier; William Daughton; Andrei N. Simakov; Luis Chacón; A. Le; Homa Karimabadi; Jonathan Ng; A. Bhattacharjee

A number of studies have considered how the rate of magnetic reconnection scales in large and weakly collisional systems by the modelling of long reconnecting current sheets. However, this set-up neglects both the formation of the current sheet and the coupling between the diffusion region and a larger system that supplies the magnetic flux. Recent studies of magnetic island merging, which naturally include these features, have found that ion kinetic physics is crucial to describe the reconnection rate and global evolution of such systems. In this paper, the effect of a guide field on reconnection during island merging is considered. In contrast to the earlier current sheet studies, we identify a limited range of guide fields for which the reconnection rate, outflow velocity, and pile-up magnetic field increase in magnitude as the guide field increases. The Hall-MHD fluid model is found to reproduce kinetic reconnection rates only for a sufficiently strong guide field, for which ion inertia breaks the fro...


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Hybrid simulations of magnetic reconnection with kinetic ions and fluid electron pressure anisotropy

A. Le; William Daughton; Homa Karimabadi; J. Egedal

We present the first hybrid simulations with kinetic ions and recently developed equations of state for the electron fluid appropriate for reconnection with a guide field. The equations of state account for the main anisotropy of the electron pressure tensor. Magnetic reconnection is studied in two systems, an initially force-free current sheet and a Harris sheet. The hybrid model with the equations of state is compared to two other models, hybrid simulations with isothermal electrons and fully kinetic simulations. Including the anisotropic equations of state in the hybrid model provides a better match to the fully kinetic model. In agreement with fully kinetic results, the main feature captured is the formation of an electron current sheet that extends several ion inertial lengths. This electron current sheet modifies the Hall magnetic field structure near the X-line, and it is not observed in the standard hybrid model with isotropic electrons. The saturated reconnection rate in this regime nevertheless ...


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Processes setting the structure of the electron distribution function within the exhausts of anti-parallel reconnection

J. Egedal; B. Wetherton; William Daughton; A. Le

In situ spacecraft observations within the exhausts of magnetic reconnection document a large variation in the velocity space structure of the electron distribution function. Multiple mechanisms help govern the underlying electron dynamics, yielding a range of signatures for collisionless reconnection. These signatures include passing beams of electrons separated by well-defined boundaries from betatron heated/cooled trapped electrons. The present study emphasizes how localized regions of non-adiabatic electron dynamics can mix electrons across the trapped/passing boundaries and impact the form of the electron distributions in the full width of the exhaust. While our study is based on 2D simulations, the described principles shaping the velocity space distributions also apply to 3D geometries making our findings relevant to spacecraft observation of reconnection in the Earths magnetosphere.

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Jan Egedal

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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J. Egedal

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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William Daughton

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Jonathan Ng

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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N. Katz

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Obioma Ohia

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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W. Fox

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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