† Corresponding author. E-mail:
Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 41774169, 41527804, and 41804159), the Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences (Grant No. QYZDJ-SSW-DQC010), and the Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (Grant No. 2016395).
It is generally accepted that during collisionless magnetic reconnection, electrons flow toward the X line in the separatrix region, and then an electron depletion layer is formed. In this paper, with two-dimensional (2D) particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation, we investigate the characteristics of the separatrix region during magnetic reconnection. In addition to the electron depletion layer, we find that there still exists an electric field parallel to the magnetic field in the separatrix region. Because a reduced ion-to-electron mass ratio and light speed are usually used in PIC simulation models, we also change these parameters to analyze the characteristics of the separatrix region. It is found that the increase in the ion-to-electron mass ratio makes the electron depletion layer and the parallel electric field more obvious, while the influence of light speed is less pronounced.
During the topological rearrangement of magnetic field lines occurring in the magnetic reconnection, in addition to the well-known dissipation from magnetic energy into plasma kinetic energy,[1–6] the production of superthermal electrons is also an important ingredient.[7–16] The reconnection electric field in the vicinity of the X line was considered to be the only site to account for electron acceleration during magnetic reconnection until the existence of the parallel electric field was revealed by Wang et al. with cluster observation.[17] Recently, the characteristics of the separatrix region have been gaining more and more attention.[18–24]
The separatrix region separates the ion diffusion region into the inflow and outflow regions. The ions flow toward the X line in the inflow region and move away from the X line in the outflow region.[25,26] However, because the electrons are frozen in the magnetic field while the ions are unmagnetized, the electron motions are different from those of ions.[18,26,27] The electrons move toward the X line in the separatrix region, and are then accelerated by the inductive electric field near the X line; at last, they are directed away along the magnetic field in the region, which is closer to the center of the current sheet.[7–9] This current system leads to a quadrupole structure of the Hall magnetic field (perpendicular to the reconnection plane).[25–33] At the same time, an electron depletion region where the electron density is smaller than in the nearby regions is formed in the separatrix region, which results in a net positive charge therein and an electric field pointing to the center of the current sheet.[34–36] Recently, satellite observations revealed the existence of a parallel electric field in the separatrix region, which indicates that the separatrix region also plays an important role in electron acceleration.[17,37] In this paper, with two-dimensional (2D) particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations, we study the formation of the parallel electric field, as well as the electron depletion layer in the separatrix region. The influences of the ion-to-electron mass ratio and light speed are also investigated.
In our 2D PIC simulation model, the electromagnetic field defined on the grids are calculated by an explicit algorithm of Maxwell equations, and the movement of particles is governed by the Lorentz force. The particles can only move in the x–z plane, and their velocities have three components. The details of our simulation model can be found in Ref. [8], and the code has been widely used to study magnetic reconnection and plasma waves.[38–43] The initial configuration is a one-dimensional Harris current sheet in the reconnection plane (the x–z plane). The magnetic field and plasma density are given by the following equations:
Both ion and electron distributions satisfy the Maxwell function, and their drift velocities along the y direction satisfy
![]() | Table 1.
Simulation parameters for runs 1–7. . |
We first describe the characteristics of the separatrix region in run 3. In run 3, the ion-to-electron mass ratio is
Figure
The formation of the electron depletion layer can be exhibited more clearly in Fig.
Figure
Figure
The spatial distributions of net charge in the simulation domain for run 3, measured by
![]() | Fig. 6. The spatial distribution of net charge in the simulation domain for run 3 at (a) ![]() ![]() |
We further investigate the formation of electron flow along the separatrix for run 3. According to the guiding center theory, the electron parallel acceleration
Figure
We also investigate the influences of the ion-to-electron mass ratio and light speed on the electron depletion layer and parallel electric field in the separatrix region. Figure
Figure
Figure
In this paper, with 2D PIC simulations, we studied the properties of the electron depletion layer and parallel electric field in the separatrix region during anti-parallel reconnection. At first, the parallel electric field pointing away from the X line is formed in the separatrix region, and then the parallel electric field pointing toward the X line is developed in the separatrix region around the X line. Both the increase in the ion-to electron mass ratio and decrease in light speed make the electron depletion layer and parallel electric field more salient in the separatrix region.
Satellite observations have already revealed the existence of the parallel electric field in the separatrix region during magnetic reconnection.[17,45,46] Both observations and our simulations have shown that in addition to the reconnection electric field induced around the X line, there still exists the parallel electric field in the separatrix region, which may play an important role in electron acceleration during magnetic reconnection. How the parallel electric field in the separatrix region will act on electron acceleration during magnetic reconnection is a direction for our future work.
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