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The Imprint of Intermittent Interchange Reconnection on the Solar Wind

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posted on 2025-05-09, 20:20 authored by Peter F. Wyper, C. R. DeVore, S. K. Antiochos, David PontinDavid Pontin, Aleida K. Higginson, Roger Scott, Sophie Masson, Theo Pelegrin-Frachon
The solar wind is known to be highly structured in space and time. Observations from Parker Solar Probe have revealed an abundance of so-called magnetic switchbacks within the near-Sun solar wind. In this Letter, we use a high-resolution, adaptive-mesh, magnetohydrodynamics simulation to explore the disturbances launched into the solar wind by intermittent/bursty interchange reconnection and how they may be related to magnetic switchbacks. We find that repeated ejection of plasmoid flux ropes into the solar wind produces a curtain of propagating and interacting torsional Alfvénic waves. We demonstrate that this curtain forms when plasmoid flux ropes dynamically realign with the radial field as they are ejected from the current layer and that this is a robust effect of the 3D geometry of the interchange reconnection region. Simulated flythroughs of this curtain in the low corona reveal an Alfvénic patch that closely resembles observations of switchback patches, but with relatively small magnetic field deflections. Therefore, we suggest that switchbacks could be the solar wind imprint of intermittent interchange reconnection in the corona, provided an in situ process subsequently amplifies the disturbances to generate the large deflections or reversals of radial field that are typically observed. That is to say, our results indicate that a combination of low-coronal and inner-heliospheric mechanisms may be required to explain switchback observations.

Funding

ARC

DP210100709

History

Journal title

Astrophysical Journal Letters

Volume

941

Issue

2

Article number

L29

Publisher

Institute of Physics Publishing (IOP)

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Engineering, Science and Environment

School

School of Information and Physical Sciences

Rights statement

© 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

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