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Dive into the research topics where Victoria N. Coffey is active.

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Featured researches published by Victoria N. Coffey.


Science | 2016

Electron-Scale Measurements of Magnetic Reconnection in Space

J. L. Burch; R. B. Torbert; T. D. Phan; L. J Chen; T. E. Moore; R. E. Ergun; J. P. Eastwood; D. J. Gershman; P. A. Cassak; M. R. Argall; Sheng-Hsiang Wang; Michael Hesse; C. J. Pollock; B. L. Giles; R. Nakamura; B. H. Mauk; S. A. Fuselier; C. T. Russell; R. J. Strangeway; J. F. Drake; M. A. Shay; Yu. V. Khotyaintsev; Per-Arne Lindqvist; Göran Marklund; F. D. Wilder; D. T. Young; K. Torkar; J. Goldstein; J. C. Dorelli; L. A. Avanov

Probing magnetic reconnection in space Magnetic reconnection occurs when the magnetic field permeating a conductive plasma rapidly rearranges itself, releasing energy and accelerating particles. Reconnection is important in a wide variety of physical systems, but the details of how it occurs are poorly understood. Burch et al. used NASAs Magnetospheric Multiscale mission to probe the plasma properties within a reconnection event in Earths magnetosphere (see the Perspective by Coates). They find that the process is driven by the electron-scale dynamics. The results will aid our understanding of magnetized plasmas, including those in fusion reactors, the solar atmosphere, solar wind, and the magnetospheres of Earth and other planets. Science, this issue p. 10.1126/science.aaf2939; see also p. 1176 Magnetic reconnection is driven by the electron-scale dynamics occurring within magnetized plasmas. INTRODUCTION Magnetic reconnection is a physical process occurring in plasmas in which magnetic energy is explosively converted into heat and kinetic energy. The effects of reconnection—such as solar flares, coronal mass ejections, magnetospheric substorms and auroras, and astrophysical plasma jets—have been studied theoretically, modeled with computer simulations, and observed in space. However, the electron-scale kinetic physics, which controls how magnetic field lines break and reconnect, has up to now eluded observation. RATIONALE To advance understanding of magnetic reconnection with a definitive experiment in space, NASA developed and launched the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission in March 2015. Flying in a tightly controlled tetrahedral formation, the MMS spacecraft can sample the magnetopause, where the interplanetary and geomagnetic fields reconnect, and make detailed measurements of the plasma environment and the electric and magnetic fields in the reconnection region. Because the reconnection dissipation region at the magnetopause is thin (a few kilometers) and moves rapidly back and forth across the spacecraft (10 to 100 km/s), high-resolution measurements are needed to capture the microphysics of reconnection. The most critical measurements are of the three-dimensional electron distributions, which must be made every 30 ms, or 100 times the fastest rate previously available. RESULTS On 16 October 2015, the MMS tetrahedron encountered a reconnection site on the dayside magnetopause and observed (i) the conversion of magnetic energy to particle kinetic energy; (ii) the intense current and electric field that causes the dissipation of magnetic energy; (iii) crescent-shaped electron velocity distributions that carry the current; and (iv) changes in magnetic topology. The crescent-shaped features in the velocity distributions (left side of the figure) are the result of demagnetization of solar wind electrons as they flow into the reconnection site, and their acceleration and deflection by an outward-pointing electric field that is set up at the magnetopause boundary by plasma density gradients. As they are deflected in these fields, the solar wind electrons mix in with magnetospheric electrons and are accelerated along a meandering path that straddles the boundary, picking up the energy released in annihilating the magnetic field. As evidence of the predicted interconnection of terrestrial and solar wind magnetic fields, the crescent-shaped velocity distributions are diverted along the newly connected magnetic field lines in a narrow layer just at the boundary. This diversion along the field is shown in the right side of the figure. CONCLUSION MMS has yielded insights into the microphysics underlying the reconnection between interplanetary and terrestrial magnetic fields. The persistence of the characteristic crescent shape in the electron distributions suggests that the kinetic processes causing magnetic field line reconnection are dominated by electron dynamics, which produces the electric fields and currents that dissipate magnetic energy. The primary evidence for this magnetic dissipation is the appearance of an electric field and a current that are parallel to one another and out of the plane of the figure. MMS has measured this electric field and current, and has identified the important role of electron dynamics in triggering magnetic reconnection. Electron dynamics controls the reconnection between the terrestrial and solar magnetic fields. The process of magnetic reconnection has been a long-standing mystery. With fast particle measurements, NASA’s Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission has measured how electron dynamics controls magnetic reconnection. The data in the circles show electrons with velocities from 0 to 104 km/s carrying current out of the page on the left side of the X-line and then flowing upward and downward along the reconnected magnetic field on the right side. The most intense fluxes are red and the least intense are blue. The plot in the center shows magnetic field lines and out-of-plane currents derived from a numerical plasma simulation using the parameters observed by MMS. Magnetic reconnection is a fundamental physical process in plasmas whereby stored magnetic energy is converted into heat and kinetic energy of charged particles. Reconnection occurs in many astrophysical plasma environments and in laboratory plasmas. Using measurements with very high time resolution, NASA’s Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission has found direct evidence for electron demagnetization and acceleration at sites along the sunward boundary of Earth’s magnetosphere where the interplanetary magnetic field reconnects with the terrestrial magnetic field. We have (i) observed the conversion of magnetic energy to particle energy; (ii) measured the electric field and current, which together cause the dissipation of magnetic energy; and (iii) identified the electron population that carries the current as a result of demagnetization and acceleration within the reconnection diffusion/dissipation region.


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).


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2008

Charging of the International Space Station as Observed by the Floating Potential Measurement Unit: Initial Results

Kenneth H. Wright; Charles Merrill Swenson; D. C. Thompson; Aroh Barjatya; Steven Koontz; Todd A. Schneider; Jason A. Vaughn; Joseph I. Minow; Paul D. Craven; Victoria N. Coffey; Linda N. Parker; Them H. Bui

The floating potential measurement unit (FPMU) is a multiprobe package designed to measure the floating potential of the International Space Station (ISS) as well as the density and temperature of the local ionospheric plasma environment. The purpose of the FPMU is to provide direct measurements of ISS spacecraft charging as continuing construction leads to dramatic changes in ISS size and configuration. FPMU data are used for refinement and validation of the ISS spacecraft charging models used to evaluate the severity and frequency of occurrence of ISS charging hazards. The FPMU data and the models are also used to evaluate the effectiveness of proposed hazard controls. The FPMU consists of four probes: a floating potential probe, two Langmuir probes, and a plasma impedance probe. These probes measure the floating potential of the ISS, plasma density, and electron temperature. Redundant measurements using different probes support data validation by interprobe comparisons. The FPMU was installed by ISS crew members during an extra-vehicular activity on the starboard (S1) truss of the ISS in early August 2006 when the ISS configuration included only one 160-V U.S. photovoltaic (PV) array module. The first data campaign began a few hours after installation and continued for over five days. Additional data campaigns were completed in 2007 after a second 160-V U.S. PV array module was added to the ISS. This paper discusses the general operational characteristics of the FPMU as integrated on ISS, the functional performance of each probe, the charging behavior of the ISS before and after the addition of a second 160-V U.S. PV array module, and initial results from model comparisons.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Decay of mesoscale flux transfer events during quasi‐continuous spatially extended reconnection at the magnetopause

H. Hasegawa; N. Kitamura; Y. Saito; T. Nagai; I. Shinohara; Shoichiro Yokota; C. J. Pollock; B. L. Giles; J. C. Dorelli; D. J. Gershman; L. A. Avanov; S. Kreisler; W. R. Paterson; M. O. Chandler; Victoria N. Coffey; J. L. Burch; R. B. Torbert; T. E. Moore; C. T. Russell; R. J. Strangeway; G. Le; M. Oka; T. D. Phan; B. Lavraud; Seiji Zenitani; Michael Hesse

We present observations on 2 October 2015 when the Geotail spacecraft, near the Earths equatorial plane, and the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft, at midsouthern latitudes, simultaneously encountered southward jets from dayside magnetopause reconnection under southward interplanetary magnetic field conditions. The observations show that the equatorial reconnection site under modest solar wind Alfven Mach number conditions remained active almost continuously for hours and, at the same time, extended over a wide range of local times (≥4 h). The reconnection jets expanded toward the magnetosphere with distance from the reconnection site. Geotail, closer to the reconnection site, occasionally encountered large-amplitude mesoscale flux transfer events (FTEs) with durations about or less than 1 min. However, MMS subsequently detected no or only smaller-amplitude corresponding FTE signatures. It is suggested that during quasi-continuous spatially extended reconnection, mesoscale FTEs decay as the jet spatially evolves over distances between the two spacecraft of ≥350 ion inertial lengths.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Cold ion demagnetization near the X‐line of magnetic reconnection

S. Toledo-Redondo; Mats André; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; Andris Vaivads; A. P. Walsh; Wenya Li; D. B. Graham; B. Lavraud; Arnaud Masson; N. Aunai; Andrey Divin; J. Dargent; S. A. Fuselier; Daniel J. Gershman; J. C. Dorelli; B. L. Giles; L. A. Avanov; C. J. Pollock; Yoshifumi Saito; T. E. Moore; Victoria N. Coffey; M. O. Chandler; Per Arne Lindqvist; R. B. Torbert; C. T. Russell

Although the effects of magnetic reconnection in magnetospheres can be observed at planetary scales, reconnection is initiated at electron scales in a plasma. Surrounding the electron diffusion reg ...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Transient, small-scale field-aligned currents in the plasma sheet boundary layer during storm time substorms

R. Nakamura; V. A. Sergeev; W. Baumjohann; F. Plaschke; W. Magnes; D. Fischer; A. Varsani; D. Schmid; T. K. M. Nakamura; C. T. Russell; R. J. Strangeway; H. K. Leinweber; G. Le; K. R. Bromund; C. J. Pollock; B. L. Giles; J. C. Dorelli; D. J. Gershman; W. R. Paterson; L. A. Avanov; S. A. Fuselier; K. J. Genestreti; J. L. Burch; R. B. Torbert; M. Chutter; M. R. Argall; Brian J. Anderson; Per-Arne Lindqvist; Göran Marklund; Y. V. Khotyaintsev

Abstract We report on field‐aligned current observations by the four Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft near the plasma sheet boundary layer (PSBL) during two major substorms on 23 June 2015. Small‐scale field‐aligned currents were found embedded in fluctuating PSBL flux tubes near the separatrix region. We resolve, for the first time, short‐lived earthward (downward) intense field‐aligned current sheets with thicknesses of a few tens of kilometers, which are well below the ion scale, on flux tubes moving equatorward/earthward during outward plasma sheet expansion. They coincide with upward field‐aligned electron beams with energies of a few hundred eV. These electrons are most likely due to acceleration associated with a reconnection jet or high‐energy ion beam‐produced disturbances. The observations highlight coupling of multiscale processes in PSBL as a consequence of magnetotail reconnection.


47th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting including The New Horizons Forum and Aerospace Exposition | 2009

Survey of International Space Station Charging Events

Paul D. Craven; Kenneth H. Wright; Joseph I. Minow; Victoria N. Coffey; Todd A. Schneider; Jason A. Vaughn; Dale C. Ferguson; Linda N. Parker

With the negative grounding of the 160V Photovoltaic (PV) arrays, the International Space Station (ISS) can experience varied and interesting charging events. Since August 2006, there has been a multi-probe p ackage, called the Floating Potential Measurement Unit (FPMU), availa ble to provide redundant measurements of the floating potential of th e ISS as well as the density and temperature of the local plasma environment. The FPMU has been operated during intermittent data campaigns since August 2006 and has collected over 160 days of information reg arding the charging of the ISS as it has progressed in configuration from one to three PV arrays and with various additional modules such as the European Space Agency?s Columbus laboratory and the Japan Aeros pace Exploration Agencys Kibo laboratory. This paper summarizes the charging of the ISS and the local environmental conditions that contr ibute to those charging events, both as measured by the FPMU.


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.


Nature Communications | 2017

Wave-particle energy exchange directly observed in a kinetic Alfvén-branch wave

D. J. Gershman; Adolfo F-Viñas; J. C. Dorelli; Scott A. Boardsen; L. A. Avanov; Paul Bellan; S. J. Schwartz; B. Lavraud; Victoria N. Coffey; M. O. Chandler; Yoshifumi Saito; W. R. Paterson; S. A. Fuselier; R. E. Ergun; Robert J. Strangeway; C. T. Russell; B. L. Giles; C. J. Pollock; R. B. Torbert; J. L. Burch

Alfvén waves are fundamental plasma wave modes that permeate the universe. At small kinetic scales, they provide a critical mechanism for the transfer of energy between electromagnetic fields and charged particles. These waves are important not only in planetary magnetospheres, heliospheres and astrophysical systems but also in laboratory plasma experiments and fusion reactors. Through measurement of charged particles and electromagnetic fields with NASAs Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission, we utilize Earths magnetosphere as a plasma physics laboratory. Here we confirm the conservative energy exchange between the electromagnetic field fluctuations and the charged particles that comprise an undamped kinetic Alfvén wave. Electrons confined between adjacent wave peaks may have contributed to saturation of damping effects via nonlinear particle trapping. The investigation of these detailed wave dynamics has been unexplored territory in experimental plasma physics and is only recently enabled by high-resolution MMS observations.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Signatures of complex magnetic topologies from multiple reconnection sites induced by Kelvin-Helmholtz instability

Y. Vernisse; B. Lavraud; S. Eriksson; D. J. Gershman; J. C. Dorelli; C. J. Pollock; B. Giles; N. Aunai; L. A. Avanov; J. L. Burch; M. O. Chandler; Victoria N. Coffey; J. Dargent; R. E. Ergun; C. J. Farrugia; Vincent Génot; D. B. Graham; H. Hasegawa; C. Jacquey; Issaad Kacem; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; Wenya Li; W. Magnes; A. Marchaudon; T. E. Moore; W. R. Paterson; E. Penou; T. D. Phan; A. Retinò; C. T. Russell

The Magnetospheric Multiscale mission has demonstrated the frequent presence of reconnection exhausts at thin current sheets within Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) waves at the flank magnetopause. Motivated ...

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M. O. Chandler

Marshall Space Flight Center

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J. C. Dorelli

Goddard Space Flight Center

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C. J. Pollock

Goddard Space Flight Center

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L. A. Avanov

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. L. Burch

Southwest Research Institute

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B. L. Giles

Goddard Space Flight Center

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C. T. Russell

University of California

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B. Lavraud

University of Toulouse

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T. E. Moore

Goddard Space Flight Center

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R. B. Torbert

University of New Hampshire

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