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      Electron acceleration from contracting magnetic islands during reconnection.

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      Nature

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          Abstract

          A long-standing problem in the study of space and astrophysical plasmas is to explain the production of energetic electrons as magnetic fields 'reconnect' and release energy. In the Earth's magnetosphere, electron energies reach hundreds of thousands of electron volts (refs 1-3), whereas the typical electron energies associated with large-scale reconnection-driven flows are just a few electron volts. Recent observations further suggest that these energetic particles are produced in the region where the magnetic field reconnects. In solar flares, upwards of 50 per cent of the energy released can appear as energetic electrons. Here we show that electrons gain kinetic energy by reflecting from the ends of the contracting 'magnetic islands' that form as reconnection proceeds. The mechanism is analogous to the increase of energy of a ball reflecting between two converging walls--the ball gains energy with each bounce. The repetitive interaction of electrons with many islands allows large numbers to be efficiently accelerated to high energy. The back pressure of the energetic electrons throttles reconnection so that the electron energy gain is a large fraction of the released magnetic energy. The resultant energy spectra of electrons take the form of power laws with spectral indices that match the magnetospheric observations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nature
          Nature
          1476-4687
          0028-0836
          Oct 5 2006
          : 443
          : 7111
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA. drake@plasma.umd.edu
          Article
          nature05116
          10.1038/nature05116
          17024088
          21d29f33-11fc-49ce-b595-de92d74d6b29
          History

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