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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan Ng is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan Ng.


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...


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

The island coalescence problem: Scaling of reconnection in extended fluid models including higher-order moments

Jonathan Ng; Yi-Min Huang; Ammar Hakim; A. Bhattacharjee; Adam Stanier; William Daughton; Liang Wang; K. Germaschewski

As modeling of collisionless magnetic reconnection in most space plasmas with realistic parameters is beyond the capability of todays simulations, due to the separation between global and kinetic length scales, it is important to establish scaling relations in model problems so as to extrapolate to realistic scales. Recently, large scale particle-in-cell simulations of island coalescence have shown that the time averaged reconnection rate decreases with system size, while fluid systems at such large scales in the Hall regime have not been studied. Here, we perform the complementary resistive magnetohydrodynamic (MHD), Hall MHD, and two fluid simulations using a ten-moment model with the same geometry. In contrast to the standard Harris sheet reconnection problem, Hall MHD is insufficient to capture the physics of the reconnection region. Additionally, motivated by the results of a recent set of hybrid simulations which show the importance of ion kinetics in this geometry, we evaluate the efficacy of the ten-moment model in reproducing such results.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2015

Self-organisation processes in the carbon arc for nanosynthesis

Jonathan Ng; Yevgeny Raitses

The atmospheric pressure carbon arc in inert gases such as helium is an important method for the production of nanomaterials. It has recently been shown that the formation of the carbon deposit on the cathode from gaseous carbon plays a crucial role in the operation of the arc, reaching the high temperatures necessary for thermionic emission to take place even with low melting point cathodes. Based on observed ablation and deposition rates, we explore the implications of deposit formation on the energy balance at the cathode surface and show how the operation of the arc is self-organised process. Our results suggest that the arc can operate in two different ablation-deposition regimes, one of which has an important contribution from latent heat to the cathode energy balance. This regime is characterised by the enhanced ablation rate, which may be favourable for high yield synthesis of nanomaterials. The second regime has a small and approximately constant ablation rate with a negligible contribution from latent heat.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Role of Ion Kinetic Physics in the Interaction of Magnetic Flux Ropes.

Adam Stanier; William Daughton; Luis Chacon; Homa Karimabadi; Jonathan Ng; Yi-Minh Huang; Ammar Hakim; A. Bhattacharjee

To explain many natural magnetized plasma phenomena, it is crucial to understand how rates of collisionless magnetic reconnection scale in large magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) scale systems. Simulations of isolated current sheets conclude such rates are independent of system size and can be reproduced by the Hall-MHD model, but neglect sheet formation and coupling to MHD scales. Here, it is shown for the problem of flux-rope merging, which includes this formation and coupling, that the Hall-MHD model fails to reproduce the kinetic results. The minimum sufficient model must retain ion kinetic effects, which set the ion diffusion region geometry and give time-averaged rates that reduce significantly with system size, leading to different global evolution in large systems.


Physics of Plasmas | 2017

Simulations of anti-parallel reconnection using a nonlocal heat flux closure

Jonathan Ng; Ammar Hakim; A. Bhattacharjee; Adam Stanier; William Daughton

The integration of kinetic effects in fluid models is important for global simulations of the Earths magnetosphere. In particular, it has been shown that ion kinetics play a crucial role in the dynamics of large reconnecting systems, and that higher-order fluid moment models can account for some of these effects. Here, we use a ten-moment model for electrons and ions, which includes the off diagonal elements of the pressure tensor that are important for magnetic reconnection. Kinetic effects are recovered by using a nonlocal heat flux closure, which approximates linear Landau damping in the fluid framework. The closure is tested using the island coalescence problem, which is sensitive to ion dynamics. We demonstrate that the nonlocal closure is able to self-consistently reproduce the structure of the ion diffusion region, pressure tensor, and ion velocity without the need for fine-tuning of relaxation coefficients present in earlier models.


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 | 2018

Using the maximum entropy distribution to describe electrons in reconnecting current sheets

Jonathan Ng; Ammar Hakim; A. Bhattacharjee

Particle distributions in weakly collisional environments such as the magnetosphere have been observed to show deviations from the Maxwellian distribution. These can often be reproduced in kinetic simulations, but fluid models, which are used in global simulations of the magnetosphere, do not necessarily capture any of this. We apply the maximum entropy fluid closure of Levermore, which leads to well posed moment equations, to reconstruct particle distributions from a kinetic simulation in a reconnection region. Our results show that without information other than the moments, the model can reproduce the general structure of the distributions but not all of the finer details. The advantages of the closure over the traditional Grad closure are also discussed.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Kinetic Structure of the Electron Diffusion Region in Antiparallel Magnetic Reconnection

Jonathan Ng; J. Egedal; Ari Le; William Daughton; Li-Jen Chen


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Two-fluid studies including pressure tensor effects of current sheet instabilities and reconnection in the magnetotail

Jonathan Ng; Ammar Hakim; A. Bhattacharjee

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Ammar Hakim

University of Washington

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William Daughton

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Adam Stanier

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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A. Le

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Yevgeny Raitses

Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

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J. Egedal

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Luis Chacon

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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