Abstract
Abstract
How magnetic reconnection drives Mercury’s magnetospheric dynamics under extreme solar wind conditions is not well understood. Here we report MESSENGER observations of an active reconnection event in Mercury’s magnetotail driven by an interplanetary coronal mass ejection on 2011 November 23. The primary Hall magnetic field, sequential passage of X-lines with Hall field perturbations, and flux ropes (FRs) provide unambiguous evidence of multiple X-line reconnection in an unstable ion diffusion region. In addition, large FRs consisting of multiple successive small-scale FRs are ejected tailward at quasi-periodic intervals of ∼1 minute, which is comparable to the Dungey cycle time. We propose that these large FRs are generated by the interaction and coalescence of multiple ion-scale FRs. This is distinct from the commonly accepted Earth-like substorm process where plasmoids are created by widely separated X-lines in the magnetotail. These observations suggest that during extreme solar wind conditions multiple X-line reconnection may dominate the tail reconnection process and control the global dynamics of Mercury’s magnetosphere.
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
14 articles.
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