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Dive into the research topics where Rebekah M. Evans is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebekah M. Evans.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Magnetohydrodynamic Waves and Coronal Heating: Unifying Empirical and MHD Turbulence Models

Igor V. Sokolov; Bart van der Holst; Rona Oran; Cooper Downs; Ilia I. Roussev; Meng Jin; Ward B. Manchester; Rebekah M. Evans; Tamas I. Gombosi

We present a new global model of the solar corona, including the low corona, the transition region, and the top of the chromosphere. The realistic three-dimensional magnetic field is simulated using the data from the photospheric magnetic field measurements. The distinctive feature of the new model is incorporating MHD Alfven wave turbulence. We assume this turbulence and its nonlinear dissipation to be the only momentum and energy source for heating the coronal plasma and driving the solar wind. The difference between the turbulence dissipation efficiency in coronal holes and that in closed field regions is because the nonlinear cascade rate degrades in strongly anisotropic (imbalanced) turbulence in coronal holes (no inward propagating wave), thus resulting in colder coronal holes, from which the fast solar wind originates. The detailed presentation of the theoretical model is illustrated with the synthetic images for multi-wavelength EUV emission compared with the observations from SDO AIA and STEREO EUVI instruments for the Carrington rotation 2107.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

Global Trends of CME Deflections Based on CME and Solar Parameters

C. Kay; Merav Opher; Rebekah M. Evans

Accurate space weather forecasting requires knowledge of the trajectory of coronal mass ejections (CMEs), including any deflections close to the Sun or through interplanetary space. Kay et al. 2013 introduced ForeCAT, a model of CME deflection resulting from the background solar magnetic field. For a magnetic field solution corresponding to Carrington Rotation (CR) 2029 (declining phase, April-May 2005), the majority of the CMEs deflected to the Heliospheric Current Sheet (HCS), the minimum in magnetic pressure on global scales. Most of the deflection occurred below 4 Rs. Here we extend ForeCAT to include a three dimensional description of the deflecting CME. We attempt to answer the following questions: a) Do all CMEs deflect to the magnetic minimum? and b) Does most deflection occur within the first few solar radii (~4 Rs)? Results for solar minimum and declining phase CMEs show that not every CME deflects to the magnetic minimum and that the deflection is typically determined below 2 Rs. Slow, wide, low mass CMEs in declining phase solar backgrounds with strong magnetic field and magnetic gradients exhibit the largest deflections. Local gradients related to active regions tend to cause the largest deviations from the deflection predicted by global magnetic gradients, but variations can also be seen for CMEs in the quiet sun regions of the declining phase CR. We show the torques due to differential forces along the CME can cause rotation about the CMEs toroidal axis.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

GLOBAL NUMERICAL MODELING OF ENERGETIC PROTON ACCELERATION IN A CORONAL MASS EJECTION TRAVELING THROUGH THE SOLAR CORONA

Kamen A. Kozarev; Rebekah M. Evans; N. A. Schwadron; M. A. Dayeh; Merav Opher; Kelly Elizabeth Korreck; Bart van der Holst

The acceleration of protons and electrons to high (sometimes GeV/nucleon) energies by solar phenomena is a key component of space weather. These solar energetic particle (SEP) events can damage spacecraft and communications, as well as present radiation hazards to humans. In-depth particle acceleration simulations have been performed for idealized magnetic fields for diffusive acceleration and particle propagation, and at the same time the quality of MHD simulations of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) has improved significantly. However, to date these two pieces of the same puzzle have remained largely decoupled. Such structures may contain not just a shock but also sizable sheath and pileup compression regions behind it, and may vary considerably with longitude and latitude based on the underlying coronal conditions. In this work, we have coupled results from a detailed global three-dimensional MHD time-dependent CME simulation to a global proton acceleration and transport model, in order to study time-dependent effects of SEP acceleration between 1.8 and 8 solar radii in the 2005 May 13 CME. We find that the source population is accelerated to at least 100 MeV, with distributions enhanced up to six orders of magnitude. Acceleration efficiency varies strongly along field lines probing different regions of the dynamically evolving CME, whose dynamics is influenced by the large-scale coronal magnetic field structure. We observe strong acceleration in sheath regions immediately behind the shock.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Comparison between hybrid and fully kinetic models of asymmetric magnetic reconnection: Coplanar and guide field configurations

N. Aunai; Michael Hesse; Seiji Zenitani; Maria M. Kuznetsova; Carrie Black; Rebekah M. Evans; R. Smets

Magnetic reconnection occurring in collisionless environments is a multi-scale process involving both ion and electron kinetic processes. Because of their small mass, the electron scales are difficult to resolve in numerical and satellite data, it is therefore critical to know whether the overall evolution of the reconnection process is influenced by the kinetic nature of the electrons, or is unchanged when assuming a simpler, fluid, electron model. This paper investigates this issue in the general context of an asymmetric current sheet, where both the magnetic field amplitude and the density vary through the discontinuity. A comparison is made between fully kinetic and hybrid kinetic simulations of magnetic reconnection in coplanar and guide field systems. The models share the initial condition but differ in their electron modeling. It is found that the overall evolution of the system, including the reconnection rate, is very similar between both models. The best agreement is found in the guide field system, which confines particle better than the coplanar one, where the locality of the moments is violated by the electron bounce motion. It is also shown that, contrary to the common understanding, reconnection is much faster in the guide field system than in the coplanar one. Both models show this tendency, indicating that the phenomenon is driven by ion kinetic effects and not electron ones.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Influence of the dissipation mechanism on collisionless magnetic reconnection in symmetric and asymmetric current layers

N. Aunai; Michael Hesse; Carrie Black; Rebekah M. Evans; Maria M. Kuznetsova

Numerical studies implementing different versions of the collisionless Ohms law have shown a reconnection rate insensitive to the nature of the non-ideal mechanism occurring at the X line, as soon as the Hall effect is operating. Consequently, the dissipation mechanism occurring in the vicinity of the reconnection site in collisionless systems is usually thought not to have a dynamical role beyond the violation of the frozen-in condition. The interpretation of recent studies has, however, led to the opposite conclusion that the electron scale dissipative processes play an important dynamical role in preventing an elongation of the electron layer from throttling the reconnection rate. This work re-visits this topic with a new approach. Instead of focusing on the extensively studied symmetric configuration, we aim to investigate whether the macroscopic properties of collisionless reconnection are affected by the dissipation physics in asymmetric configurations, for which the effect of the Hall physics is substantially modified. Because it includes all the physical scales a priori important for collisionless reconnection (Hall and ion kinetic physics) and also because it allows one to change the nature of the non-ideal electron scale physics, we use a (two dimensional) hybrid model. The effects of numerical, resistive, and hyper-resistive dissipation are studied. In a first part, we perform simulations of symmetric reconnection with different non-ideal electron physics. We show that the model captures the already known properties of collisionless reconnection. In a second part, we focus on an asymmetric configuration where the magnetic field strength and the density are both asymmetric. Our results show that contrary to symmetric reconnection, the asymmetric model evolution strongly depends on the nature of the mechanism which breaks the field line connectivity. The dissipation occurring at the X line plays an important role in preventing the electron current layer from elongating and forming plasmoids.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

FORECASTING A CORONAL MASS EJECTION'S ALTERED TRAJECTORY: ForeCAT

C. Kay; Merav Opher; Rebekah M. Evans


Space Weather-the International Journal of Research and Applications | 2013

The SCORE Scale: A Coronal Mass Ejection Typification System Based On Speed

Rebekah M. Evans; Antti Pulkkinen; Yihua Zheng; M. Leila Mays; A. Taktakishvili; Maria M. Kuznetsova; Michael Hesse


Archive | 2010

Evolution of Piled Up Compressions in Modeled CME Sheaths and the Resulting Sheath Structures

I. Das; Merav Opher; Rebekah M. Evans; Tamas I. Gombosi


2014 AGU Fall Meeting | 2014

The Onset of Magnetic Reconnection in the Solar Atmosphere

Rebekah M. Evans


Archive | 2012

Does the Rate of Collisionless Reconnection Depend on the Dissipation Mechanism

N. Aunai; Michael Hesse; Carrie Black; Rebekah M. Evans; Maria M. Kuznetsova

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Rona Oran

University of Michigan

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N. Aunai

École Polytechnique

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I. Das

George Mason University

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