• Mikhail Sitnov
  • Joachim Birn
  • Banafsheh Ferdousi
  • Evgeny Gordeev
  • Yuri Khotyaintsev
  • Viacheslav Merkin
  • Tetsuo Motoba
  • Antonius Otto
  • Evgeny Panov
  • Philip Pritchett
  • Fulvia Pucci
  • Joachim Raeder
  • Andrei Runov
  • Victor Sergeev
  • Marco Velli
  • Xuzhi Zhou

Modes and manifestations of the explosive activity in the Earth’s magnetotail, as well as its onset mechanisms and key pre-onset conditions are reviewed. Two mechanisms for the generation of the pre-onset current sheet are discussed, namely magnetic flux addition to the tail lobes, or other high-latitude perturbations, and magnetic flux evacuation from the near-Earth tail associated with dayside reconnection. Reconnection onset may require stretching and thinning of the sheet down to electron scales. It may also start in thicker sheets in regions with a tailward gradient of the equatorial magnetic field B z ; in this case it begins as an ideal-MHD instability followed by the generation of bursty bulk flows and dipolarization fronts. Indeed, remote sensing and global MHD modeling show the formation of tail regions with increased B z , prone to magnetic reconnection, ballooning/interchange and flapping instabilities. While interchange instability may also develop in such thicker sheets, it may grow more slowly compared to tearing and cause secondary reconnection locally in the dawn-dusk direction. Post-onset transients include bursty flows and dipolarization fronts, micro-instabilities of lower-hybrid-drift and whistler waves, as well as damped global flux tube oscillations in the near-Earth region. They convert the stretched tail magnetic field energy into bulk plasma acceleration and collisionless heating, excitation of a broad spectrum of plasma waves, and collisional dissipation in the ionosphere. Collisionless heating involves ion reflection from fronts, Fermi, betatron as well as other, non-adiabatic, mechanisms. Ionospheric manifestations of some of these magnetotail phenomena are discussed. Explosive plasma phenomena observed in the laboratory, the solar corona and solar wind are also discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Article number31
JournalSpace Science Reviews
Volume215
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2019

    Scopus subject areas

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

    Research areas

  • Auroral beads/rays, B hump, Ballooning/interchange instability, Bursty bulk flows, Current sheet thinning, Dipolarization fronts, Flapping motions, Flux tube oscillations, Laboratory reconnection experiments, Magnetic reconnection, Magnetotail, Particle acceleration, Plasma micro-instabilities, Supra-arcade downflows, Tearing instability, B z hump

ID: 42297137