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![]() by Staff Writers Plainsboro NJ (SPX) Apr 22, 2022
A puzzling process called magnetic reconnection triggers explosive phenomena throughout the universe, creating solar flares and space storms that can take down mobile phone service and electrical power grids. Now scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) have detailed a roadmap for untangling a key aspect of this puzzle that could deepen insight into the workings of the cosmos. Reconnection converts the magnetic field energy to particle eruptions in astrophysical plasmas by snapping apart and explosively reconnecting the magnetic field lines - a process that occurs within what are called dissipation regions that are often enormously smaller than the regions they impact.
Stressed magnetic field "Dissipation scales are tiny whereas astrophysical scales are very large and can extend for millions of miles. Finding a way to bridge these scales through a multiscale mechanism is a key to solving the reconnection puzzle." The roadmap outlines the role of developing technologies with multiscale capabilities such as the Facility for Laboratory Reconnection Experiment (FLARE), a recently installed collaborative facility that is being upgraded and will probe facets of magnetic reconnection never before accessible to laboratory experiments. Complementing these experiments will be simulations on coming exascale supercomputers that will be 10 times faster than current computers. "The hope is for FLARE and exascale computing to go hand-in-hand," Ji said. The working theory the PPPL roadmap proposes is that multiple plasmoids, or magnetic islands, that arise from reconnection along lengthy plasma current sheets could bridge the vast range of scales. Such plasmoids would correspond more closely to the affected reconnection region, with multiscale laboratory experiments planned to provide the first tests of this theory and to evaluate competing hypotheses. "Exascale will allow us to do more credible simulations based on high-fidelity FLARE experiments," said PPPL physicist Jongsoo Yoo, a coauthor of the paper. The increased size and power of the new machine - its diameter will be twice that of the sports-utility-vehicle-sized Magnetic Reconnection Experiment (MRX), PPPL's long-standing laboratory experiment - and will enable scientists to replicate reconnection in nature more faithfully. "FLARE can access wider astrophysical regimes than MRX with multiple reconnection points and measure the field geometry during reconnection," said William Daughton, a computational scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and a coauthor of the paper. "Understanding this physics is important for predicting how reconnection proceeds in solar flares," he said.
Key challenge "Progress in understanding multiscale physics critically depends on innovation and efficient implementation of such diagnostics systems in the coming decade," the paper said. The new findings will address open questions that include: + How exactly does reconnection start? + How are explosive plasma particles heated and accelerated? + What role does reconnection play in related processes such as turbulence and space shocks? Overall, "The paper lays out plans to provide the entire space physics and astrophysics communities with methods to solve the multiscale problem," Yoo said. Such a solution would mark a major step toward a more complete understanding of magnetic reconnection in large systems throughout the universe. Support for this work comes from the DOE Office of Science. Coauthors include Jonathan Jara-Almonte of PPPL and Ari Le and Adam Stanier of Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Research Report:Magnetic reconnection in the era of exascale computing and multiscale experiments
![]() ![]() Most distant star to date spotted - but how much further back in time could we see? Hatfield UK (The Conversation) Apr 15, 2022 The Hubble Space Telescope has observed the most distant star ever seen - Earendel, meaning morning star. Even though Earendel is 50 times the mass of the Sun, and millions of times brighter, we would not normally be able to see it. We can see it due to an alignment of the star with a large galaxy cluster in front of it whose gravity bends the light from the star to make it brighter and more focused - essentially creating a lens. Astronomers see into the deep past when we view distant objects. Lig ... read more
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