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Dive into the research topics where Li-Jen Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Li-Jen Chen.


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Multispacecraft observations of the electron current sheet, neighboring magnetic islands, and electron acceleration during magnetotail reconnection

Li-Jen Chen; Naoki Bessho; Bertrand Lefebvre; H. Vaith; Arne Asnes; Ondrej Santolik; Andrew N. Fazakerley; Pamela Ann Puhl-Quinn; A. Bhattacharjee; Yuri Khotyaintsev; P. W. Daly; R. B. Torbert

Open questions concerning structures and dynamics of diffusion regions and electron acceleration in collisionless magnetic reconnection are addressed based on data from the four-spacecraft mission Cluster and particle-in-cell simulations. Using time series of electron distribution functions measured by the four spacecraft, distinct electron regions around a reconnection layer are mapped out to set the framework for studying diffusion regions. A spatially extended electron current sheet (ecs), a series of magnetic islands, and bursts of energetic electrons within islands are identified during magnetotail reconnection with no appreciable guide field. The ecs is collocated with a layer of electron-scale electric fields normal to the ecs and pointing toward the ecs center plane. Both the observed electron and ion densities vary by more than a factor of 2 within one ion skin depth north and south of the ecs, and from the ecs into magnetic islands. Within each of the identified islands, there is a burst of supr...


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).


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Electron energization and structure of the diffusion region during asymmetric reconnection

Li-Jen Chen; Michael Hesse; Shan Wang; N. Bessho; William Daughton

Results from particle-in-cell simulations of reconnection with asymmetric upstream conditions are reported to elucidate electron energization and structure of the electron diffusion region (EDR). Acceleration of unmagnetized electrons results in discrete structures in the distribution functions and supports the intense current and perpendicular heating in the EDR. The accelerated electrons are cyclotron turned by the reconnected magnetic field to produce the outflow jets, and as such, the acceleration by the reconnection electric field is limited, leading to resistivity without particle-particle or particle-wave collisions. A map of electron distributions is constructed, and its spatial evolution is compared with quantities previously proposed to be EDR identifiers to enable effective identifications of the EDR in terrestrial magnetopause reconnection.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

On the Electron Diffusion Region in Asymmetric Reconnection with a Guide Magnetic Field

Michael Hesse; Yi-Hsin Liu; Li-Jen Chen; N. Bessho; M. Kuznetsova; Joachim Birn; J. L. Burch

Particle-in-cell simulations in a 2.5-D geometry and analytical theory are employed to study the electron diffusion region in asymmetric reconnection with a guide magnetic field. The analysis presented here demonstrates that similar to the case without guide field, in-plane flow stagnation and null of the in-plane magnetic field are well separated. In addition, it is shown that the electric field at the local magnetic X point is again dominated by inertial effects, whereas it remains dominated by nongyrotropic pressure effects at the in-plane flow stagnation point. A comparison between local electron Larmor radii and the magnetic gradient scale lengths predicts that distribution should become nongyrotropic in a region enveloping both field reversal and flow stagnation points. This prediction is verified by an analysis of modeled electron distributions, which show clear evidence of mixing in the critical region.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Spatiotemporal evolution of electron characteristics in the electron diffusion region of magnetic reconnection: Implications for acceleration and heating

J. R. Shuster; Li-Jen Chen; Michael Hesse; Matthew R. Argall; William Daughton; R. B. Torbert; N. Bessho

Based on particle-in-cell simulations of collisionless magnetic reconnection, the spatiotemporal evolution of electron velocity distributions in the electron diffusion region (EDR) is reported to illustrate how electrons are accelerated and heated. Approximately when the reconnection rate maximizes, electron distributions in the vicinity of the X line exhibit triangular structures with discrete striations and a temperature (Te) twice that of the inflow region. Te increases as the meandering EDR populations mix with inflowing electrons. As the distance from the X line increases within the electron outflow jet, the discrete populations swirl into arcs and gyrotropize by the end of the jet with Te about 3 times that of the X line. Two dominant processes increase Te and produce the spatially and temporally evolving EDR distributions: (1) electric field acceleration preferential to electrons which meander in the EDR for longer times and (2) cyclotron turning by the magnetic field normal to the reconnection layer.


Physics of Plasmas | 2011

The inversion layer of electric fields and electron phase-space-hole structure during two-dimensional collisionless magnetic reconnection

Li-Jen Chen; William Daughton; Bertrand Lefebvre; R. B. Torbert

Based on two-dimensional fully kinetic simulations that resolve the electron diffusion layer in undriven collisionless magnetic reconnection with zero guide field, this paper reports the existence and evolution of an inversion layer of bipolar electric fields, its corresponding phase-space structure (an electron-hole layer), and the implication to collisionless dissipation. The inversion electric field layer is embedded in the layer of bipolar Hall electric field and extends throughout the entire length of the electron diffusion layer. The electron phase-space hole structure spontaneously arises during the explosive growth phase when there exist significant inflows into the reconnection layer, and electrons perform meandering orbits across the layer while being cyclotron-turned toward the outflow directions. The cyclotron turning of meandering electrons by the magnetic field normal to the reconnection layer is shown to be a primary factor limiting the current density in the region where the reconnection e...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Electron energization and mixing observed by MMS in the vicinity of an electron diffusion region during magnetopause reconnection

Li-Jen Chen; Michael Hesse; Shan Wang; D. J. Gershman; R. E. Ergun; C. J. Pollock; R. B. Torbert; N. Bessho; William Daughton; J. C. Dorelli; B. L. Giles; Robert J. Strangeway; C. T. Russell; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; J. L. Burch; T. E. Moore; B. Lavraud; Tai Phan; L. A. Avanov

Measurements from the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission are reported to show distinct features of electron energization and mixing in the diffusion region of the terrestrial magnetopause reconnection. At the ion jet and magnetic field reversals, distribution functions exhibiting signatures of accelerated meandering electrons are observed at an electron out-of-plane flow peak. The meandering signatures manifested as triangular and crescent structures are established features of the electron diffusion region (EDR). Effects of meandering electrons on the electric field normal to the reconnection layer are detected. Parallel acceleration and mixing of the inflowing electrons with exhaust electrons shape the exhaust flow pattern. In the EDR vicinity, the measured distribution functions indicate that locally, the electron energization and mixing physics is captured by two-dimensional reconnection, yet to account for the simultaneous four-point measurements, translational invariant in the third dimension must be violated on the ion-skin-depth scale.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Laboratory Measurements of Electrostatic Solitary Structures Generated by Beam Injection

Bertrand Lefebvre; Li-Jen Chen; Walter Gekelman; P. M. Kintner; Jolene S. Pickett; Patrick Pribyl; Stephen Vincena; Franklin Chiang; Jack W. Judy

Electrostatic solitary structures are generated by injection of a suprathermal electron beam parallel to the magnetic field in a laboratory plasma. Electric microprobes with tips smaller than the Debye length (λDe) enabled the measurement of positive potential pulses with half-widths 4 to 25λDe and velocities 1 to 3 times the background electron thermal speed. Nonlinear wave packets of similar velocities and scales are also observed, indicating that the two descend from the same mode which is consistent with the electrostatic whistler mode and result from an instability likely to be driven by field-aligned currents.


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.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Highly structured electron anisotropy in collisionless reconnection exhausts

J. R. Shuster; Li-Jen Chen; William Daughton; L. C. Lee; K. H. Lee; N. Bessho; R. B. Torbert; G. Li; Matthew R. Argall

Results from two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations of collisionless magnetic reconnection with zero guide field discussed in this paper reveal that around the time when the reconnection rate peaks, electron velocity distributions become highly structured in magnetic islands and open exhausts. Rings, arcs, and counterstreaming beams are generic and lasting components of the exhaust electron distributions. The temporal dependence of electron distributions provides a perspective to explain an outstanding discrepancy concerning the degree of electron anisotropy in reconnection exhausts and enables inference of the reconnection phase based on observed anisotropic electron distributions. Some of the structures predicted by our simulations are confirmed by measurements from the Cluster spacecraft during its encounter with reconnection exhausts in the magnetotail.

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R. B. Torbert

University of New Hampshire

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J. L. Burch

Southwest Research Institute

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William Daughton

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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N. Bessho

Goddard Space Flight Center

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B. Lavraud

University of Toulouse

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B. L. Giles

Goddard Space Flight Center

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C. J. Pollock

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. C. Dorelli

Goddard Space Flight Center

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L. A. Avanov

Goddard Space Flight Center

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