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Dive into the research topics where J. Egedal is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Egedal.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Currents and associated electron scattering and bouncing near the diffusion region at Earth's magnetopause

B. Lavraud; Y. C. Zhang; Y. Vernisse; D. J. Gershman; J. C. Dorelli; P. A. Cassak; J. Dargent; C. J. Pollock; B. Giles; N. Aunai; M. R. Argall; L. A. Avanov; Alexander C. Barrie; J. L. Burch; M. O. Chandler; Li-Jen Chen; G. Clark; I. J. Cohen; Victoria N. Coffey; J. P. Eastwood; J. Egedal; S. Eriksson; R. E. Ergun; C. J. Farrugia; S. A. Fuselier; Vincent Génot; D. B. Graham; E. E. Grigorenko; H. Hasegawa; Christian Jacquey

Based on high-resolution measurements from NASAs Magnetospheric Multiscale mission, we present the dynamics of electrons associated with current systems observed near the diffusion region of magnetic reconnection at Earths magnetopause. Using pitch angle distributions (PAD) and magnetic curvature analysis, we demonstrate the occurrence of electron scattering in the curved magnetic field of the diffusion region down to energies of 20 eV. We show that scattering occurs closer to the current sheet as the electron energy decreases. The scattering of inflowing electrons, associated with field-aligned electrostatic potentials and Hall currents, produces a new population of scattered electrons with broader PAD which bounce back and forth in the exhaust. Except at the center of the diffusion region the two populations are collocated and appear to behave adiabatically: the inflowing electron PAD focuses inward (toward lower magnetic field), while the bouncing population PAD gradually peaks at 90° away from the center (where it mirrors owing to higher magnetic field and probable field-aligned potentials).


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.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Spacecraft Observations and Analytic Theory of Crescent-Shaped Electron Distributions in Asymmetric Magnetic Reconnection

J. Egedal; A. Le; William Daughton; B. Wetherton; P. A. Cassak; Li-Jen Chen; B. Lavraud; R. B. Torbert; J. C. Dorelli; Dan Gershman; L. A. Avanov

Supported by a kinetic simulation, we derive an exclusion energy parameter E_{X} providing a lower kinetic energy bound for an electron to cross from one inflow region to the other during magnetic reconnection. As by a Maxwell demon, only high-energy electrons are permitted to cross the inner reconnection region, setting the electron distribution function observed along the low-density side separatrix during asymmetric reconnection. The analytic model accounts for the two distinct flavors of crescent-shaped electron distributions observed by spacecraft in a thin boundary layer along the low-density separatrix.


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.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2018

Electron Crescent Distributions as a Manifestation of Diamagnetic Drift in an Electron‐Scale Current Sheet: Magnetospheric Multiscale Observations Using New 7.5 ms Fast Plasma Investigation Moments

A. Rager; J. C. Dorelli; D. J. Gershman; Vadim M. Uritsky; L. A. Avanov; R. B. Torbert; J. L. Burch; R. E. Ergun; J. Egedal; C. Schiff; J. R. Shuster; B. L. Giles; W. R. Paterson; C. J. Pollock; R. J. Strangeway; C. T. Russell; B. Lavraud; Victoria N. Coffey; Y. Saito

Abstract We report Magnetospheric Multiscale observations of electron pressure gradient electric fields near a magnetic reconnection diffusion region using a new technique for extracting 7.5 ms electron moments from the Fast Plasma Investigation. We find that the deviation of the perpendicular electron bulk velocity from E × B drift in the interval where the out‐of‐plane current density is increasing can be explained by the diamagnetic drift. In the interval where the out‐of‐plane current is transitioning to in‐plane current, the electron momentum equation is not satisfied at 7.5 ms resolution.


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 | 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 | 2017

Impact of compressibility and a guide field on Fermi acceleration during magnetic island coalescence

P. Montag; J. Egedal; E. Lichko; B. Wetherton

Previous work has shown that Fermi acceleration can be an effective heating mechanism during magnetic island coalescence, where electrons may undergo repeated reflections as the magnetic field lines contract. This energization has the potential to account for the power-law distributions of particle energy inferred from observations of solar flares. Here, we develop a generalized framework for the analysis of Fermi acceleration that can incorporate the effects of compressibility and non-uniformity along field lines, which have commonly been neglected in previous treatments of the problem. Applying this framework to the simplified case of the uniform flux tube allows us to find both the power-law scaling of the distribution function and the rate at which the power-law behavior develops. We find that a guide magnetic field of order unity effectively suppresses the development of power-law distributions.

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A. Le

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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William Daughton

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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L. A. Avanov

Goddard Space Flight Center

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B. Lavraud

University of Toulouse

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J. C. Dorelli

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. L. Burch

Southwest Research Institute

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C. J. Pollock

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Li-Jen Chen

Goddard Space Flight Center

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