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Roger B. Scott Department of Physics Montana State University Bozeman, MT 59717, USA Phone: +1 808 652 2167 E-mail: [email protected] URL: solar.physics.montana.edu/rscott Selection Committee Jack Eddy Postdoctoral Fellowship Program Visiting Scientist Program University Corporation for Atmospheric Research Dear members of the selection committee, January 15, 2016 I am writing to submit my application for the Jack Eddy Postdoctoral Fellowship. My application is supported by Professor Marco Velli at the University of California, Las Angeles. As a graduate student in solar physics at Montana State University I have spent the last several years studying magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) in the context of solar flares and coronal dynamics. In October of 2015 I defended my dissertation, entitled Analytical and Numerical Modeling of Coronal Supra-Arcade Fan Struc- tures. The complete document can be found at solar.physics.montana.edu/rscott/hosting/RBS_dissertation. I am currently awaiting conferment of my Ph.D., which is anticipated in April of 2016, and I am now pursuing a postdoctoral position related to plasma physics in the solar corona. My past research involves observations and modeling of supra-arcade fan structures, with a particular focus on disambiguating observational features through theoretical and numerical modeling. To date I have focused on the apparent motion of plasma in the plane of the supra-arcade slab. This has been a fruitful approach since supra-arcade structures appear to be nearly two-dimensional and can therefore be treated without consideration of variability along the line of sight. However, as it is broadly accepted that these supra-arcade structures are coincident with a layer of high current density, I hope in future work to incorporate the dynamics of the current sheet itself and to treat these structures self consistently in three dimensions. It is for this reason that Professor Velli and I have chosen to draft this application together. Where my expertise is in the non-diusive regime of MHD, his is directly related to current sheet stability and the onset of fast reconnection. It is our hope that through our combined eorts we can form a more complete picture of the dynamics of reconnecting current layers and the surrounding plasma. Please find attached a detailed description of our intended avenue of research, as well as supporting material for this application. Kind Regards, Roger B. Scott

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Page 1: Selection Committee Jack Eddy Postdoctoral Fellowship ...solar.physics.montana.edu/rscott/hosting/RBS_JE_merged.pdfModel, (submitted to ApJ, Dec. 2015) Scott, Roger B.; McKenzie, David

Roger B. ScottDepartment of Physics

Montana State University

Bozeman, MT 59717, USA

Phone: +1 808 652 2167

E-mail: [email protected]

URL: solar.physics.montana.edu/rscott

Selection CommitteeJack Eddy Postdoctoral Fellowship ProgramVisiting Scientist ProgramUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research

Dear members of the selection committee, January 15, 2016

I am writing to submit my application for the Jack Eddy Postdoctoral Fellowship. My application issupported by Professor Marco Velli at the University of California, Las Angeles.

As a graduate student in solar physics at Montana State University I have spent the last several yearsstudying magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) in the context of solar flares and coronal dynamics. In October of2015 I defended my dissertation, entitled Analytical and Numerical Modeling of Coronal Supra-Arcade Fan Struc-tures. The complete document can be found at solar.physics.montana.edu/rscott/hosting/RBS_dissertation.I am currently awaiting conferment of my Ph.D., which is anticipated in April of 2016, and I am nowpursuing a postdoctoral position related to plasma physics in the solar corona.

My past research involves observations and modeling of supra-arcade fan structures, with a particularfocus on disambiguating observational features through theoretical and numerical modeling. To date Ihave focused on the apparent motion of plasma in the plane of the supra-arcade slab. This has been afruitful approach since supra-arcade structures appear to be nearly two-dimensional and can therefore betreated without consideration of variability along the line of sight. However, as it is broadly accepted thatthese supra-arcade structures are coincident with a layer of high current density, I hope in future work toincorporate the dynamics of the current sheet itself and to treat these structures self consistently in threedimensions.

It is for this reason that Professor Velli and I have chosen to draft this application together. Wheremy expertise is in the non-di�usive regime of MHD, his is directly related to current sheet stability and theonset of fast reconnection. It is our hope that through our combined e�orts we can form a more completepicture of the dynamics of reconnecting current layers and the surrounding plasma.

Please find attached a detailed description of our intended avenue of research, as well as supportingmaterial for this application.

Kind Regards,

Roger B. Scott

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Roger B. Scott Curriculum Vitae

Department of Physics Mobile: +1 808 652 2167Montana State University O�ce: +1 406 994 6718Bozeman, MT, 59717, United States E-mail: [email protected]

Contact

Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, United StatesEducation

Ph.D. - Physics – awaiting conferment: Spring 2016

M.S. - Physics – 2010

Reed College, Portland, Oregon, United States

B.A. - Physics – 2006

Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, United StatesResearchExperience Solar Physics Group 2011 – Present

Graduate Research Assistant: Working with Professors David E. McKenzie and DanaW. Longcope to observe and model the dynamics of Supra-Arcade Fan Structures.

• Developed 2D analytical model of supra-arcade downflows in zero-� limit.• Developed 2D non-di↵usive MHD simulation of supra-arcade downflows with arbitraryplasma �.

• Developed data-assimilated model for evolution of supra-arcade fan structures with ap-plication to estimating plasma � and radiated Alfven spectrum.

Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, United StatesApplied Optics 2008 – 2011

Graduate Research Assistant: Worked with Professor Alan Craig on trapping and char-acterization of silicon nano-spheres for application to quantum memory systems.

• Developed interferometric optical trap using high-power parabolic reflector.• Characterized dielectric potential and synthesize silicon nano-spheres.

Skills : Linux System Administration, Hardware Assembly & ReplacementComputingLanguages : Shell, IDL, Octave, LATEX, PythonEnvironments : Emacs, VI, Linux, Unix, BSDFocus : PDE Solvers (Initial Value, Shooting, Root Finding, Stability, Convergence)

Scott, Roger B.; Longcope, Dana W.; McKenzie, David E., Peristaltic Pumping near Post -PublicationsCoronal Mass Ejection Supra-Arcade Current Sheets ApJ 776, 54 (2013).

Scott, Roger B., Gyroscopically Coupled Mechanical Oscillators, Reed College Library, ThesisArchive (2006)

Scott, Roger B.; McKenzie, David E.; Longcope, Dana W., Inferring the MagnetohydrodynamicManuscripts inPreparation Structure of Solar Flare Supra-Arcade Plasmas from a Data Assimilated Field Transport

Model, (submitted to ApJ, Dec. 2015)

Scott, Roger B.; McKenzie, David E.; Longcope, Dana W., Numerical Simulations of PlasmaDynamics in the Vicinity of a Retracting Flux Tube, (submitting to ApJ, Spring 2016)

Scott, Roger B., Analytical and Numerical Modeling of Coronal Supra-Arcade Fan Structures,Dissertation(UMI publishing, 2016), preprint

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Observations and MHD Modeling of Supra-Arcade Fan Structures – talkPosters andPresentations Ninth Annual Hinode Science Meeting, Belfast, North Ireland, UK, 2015

On the Magnetohydrodynamics of Supra-Arcade Fan Structures – talkTriennial Earth-Sun Summit / SPD, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, 2015

Inferring Magnetic Evolution in Supra-Arcade Fan Structures – posterCombined Hinode VIII, LWS, SDO, IRIS Workshop, Portland, Oregon, USA, 2014

Inferring the Evolution of Supra-Arcade Magnetic Fields – talkRelativity and Astrophysics Colloquium, Bozeman, Montana, USA, 2014

Advection of Magnetic Field Lines in Supra-Arcade Fan Structures – posterAnnual Meeting of the AAS: SPD, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 2014

Peristaltic Pumping near Post-CME Supra-Arcade Current Sheets – talkAnnual Meeting of the AAS: SPD, Bozeman, Montana, USA, 2013

Peristaltic Pumping in Post-CME Supra-Arcade Current Sheets – posterCoronal Loops Workshop VI, La Roche-en-Ardenne, Belgium, 2013

Peristaltic Shocks in Post-CME Unreconnected Field – posterSixth Annual Hinode Science Meeting, Saint Andrews, Scotland, UK, 2012

Nozzle Driven Shocks in Post-CME Plasma – posterAnnual Meeting of the AAS: SPD, Anchorage, Alaska, USA, 2012

SPD Studentship Travel Award (2014)Honors andAwards

Sixth Coronal Loops Workshop Student Travel Award (2013)

Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, United StatesTeachingExperience Department of Physics

Introductory Physics Course Instructor Summer, 2011

• Developed curriculum and course schedule.• Prepared and delivered daily course lectures.• Supervised graduate teaching assistants.• Graded bi-weekly examinations .

Introductory Physics Graduate Teaching Assistant 2008 – 2009

• Supervised introductory physics laboratory experiments and inquiry sessions.• Graded daily work assignments and quarterly examinations.

Reed College, Portland, Oregon, United StatesPhysics Department

Department Associate / Physics 100 Laboratory Supervisor 2006 – 2008

• Supervised students and student teaching assistants in introductory laboratory sections.• Assisted with demonstrations for introductory physics lectures.• Graded quarterly physics projects and reports.

Physics 100 Laboratory Teaching Assistant 2004 – 2006

• Assisted students with introductory laboratory experiments.• Graded weekly laboratory reports.

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List of References for Roger B. Scott

Roger B. ScottApplicant

Contact

Information

Department of Physics Mobile: +1 808 652 2167

Montana State University O�ce: +1 406 994 6718

Bozeman, MT, 59717, United States E-mail: [email protected]

David E. McKenzie

245 EPS Building Collaborator, Graduate Committee Chair

Department of Physics [email protected]

Montana State University +1 406 994 7843

Bozeman, MT, 59717, United States

Reference

Contact

Information

Dana W. Longcope

260D EPS Building Collaborator, Graduate Committee Member

Department of Physics [email protected]

Montana State University +1 406 994 7851

Bozeman, MT, 59717, United States

Charles Kankelborg

260C EPS Building Graduate Committee Member

Department of Physics [email protected]

Montana State University +1 406 994 7853

Bozeman, MT, 59717, United States

Jiong Qiu

221 EPS Building Graduate Committee Member

Department of Physics [email protected]

Montana State University +1 406 994 7253

Bozeman, MT, 59717, United States

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Ph.D. Dissertation Information

In October of 2015 I defended my Ph.D. dissertation, which has now been accepted into the library at Mon-tana State University. The title and abstract of my dissertation are as follows, and the full document canbe found at solar.physics.montana.edu/rscott/hosting/RBS dissertation.

Title

Analytical and Numerical Modeling of Coronal Supra-Arcade Fan Structures

by

Roger B. Scott

Abstract

Among the myriad of interesting phenomenon in the solar corona is the highly dynamic region

above active region arcades, commonly referred to as the “supra-arcade” region. In the minutes and

hours following the formation of an arcade of post-flare loops, we commonly observe the development

of a curtain like structure, with spiny rays of enhanced emission in X-Ray and extreme ultra-violet.

Additionally, these structures often exhibit dynamics over a variety of length scales, from large-amplitude

coherent transverse oscillations, to the appearance of low-emission columns that seem to descend toward

the solar limb. The wealth of dynamical aspects that are present in the supra-arcade seems to indicate

that the plasma there is subject to a complex balance of influencing factors, which makes it di�cult to

develop a self-consistent hypothesis for describing all of the various features simultaneously. In this work

we undertake to explain one such behavior as an isolated phenomenon. We argue that the descending

low-emission voids, sometimes called Supra-Arcade Downflows (SADs) are consistent with the formation

of a particular kind of shock in the vicinity of a retracting element of reconnected magnetic flux. We then

use numerical simulations to expand this result to a broader parameter space, as well as investigating the

details of a variety of other behavioral regimes. Finally, in an e�ort to understand the broader dynamics of

the supra-arcade region, we undertake a study that incorporates imaging data into a numerical simulation,

which can then be used to estimate the ambient plasma parameters in the supra-arcade region. In this

way we show that the balance of influencing factors in the supra-arcade is indeed highly dynamic and

that the simplifications o�ered in certain extremes of magnetohydrodynamics are ill-applied in this case.

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Project Proposal

Current Sheets and Plasma Dynamics Above Active Region Arcades:

Exploring the Interconnectedness of Bulk Plasma Evolution and the Transition to Fast Reconnection

Motivation

Many of the longstanding questions about solar energetic events can be couched in terms of the followingquery: How is it that long-lived, slowly evolving coronal magnetic structures are able to undergo spontaneousreconfiguration in the context of solar energetic events? To many, the answer is given in terms of the onsetof fast reconnection. And while the accepted view is that Sweet-Parker reconnection (Parker, 1957) is tooslow to account for the reconfiguration of magnetic fields in a solar energetic event, there are a variety ofproposed mechanisms that could speed up the reconnection process; Petschek reconnection (Petschek, 1964)allows for an increased reconnection rate due to the presence of a standing magnetosonic shock, while theplasmoid instability (Biskamp, 1986) allows for turbulent enhancement of the macroscopic resisitivity andcan thereby lead to increased reconnection rates. And yet, while these models allow for reconciliation ofobservations with the general theory of reconnection, instrumental limitations continue to prohibit directdetection of current sheets and measurements of their internal structure.

In recent years much attention has been given to the di�use emission above post-CME flare loop arcades,in the so called supra-arcade region (see Fig. 1). Interest in these structures, which are qualitatively similarto helmet streamers, has been stimulated by a combination of two key observations. The first is that, likehelmet streamers, the enhanced emission above the flare loop arcade is thought to coincide with a rotationaldiscontinuity in the open magnetic field, i.e. a current sheet. And since currents in the solar corona cannot be viewed directly, observations of these plasma structures are thought to be indicative of the dynamicsof the coincident current sheet. The second reason for studying the supra-arcade region is that, while theenergy distribution in the underlying active region is typically understood to be magnetically dominated,the behavior of the plasma in the supra-arcade o�ers evidence of a much more subtle energy balance –recent work by McKenzie (2013) and Scott et al. (accepted: 2016) suggests that — Ø 1 is a likely possibility.Thus, supra-arcade structures are ideal laboratories for studying the transition from low to high — and theirnearly-2D configuration allows for comparison of simplified analytical and numerical models, without theneed to disambiguate geometric e�ects due to variation along the line of sight.

Figure 1: An example of a flare loop arcade is shown in the 131 A and 193 A channels of the AtmosphericImaging Assembly (Warren et al., 2011). The supra-arcade ‘fan’ can be seen in the 131 A channel on theleft. This event occurred on the North-West limb on 2011 October 22.

1

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Ongoing Research

Research related to the supra-arcade region has largely centered around Supra-Arcade Downflows (SADs),which were first observed by McKenzie & Hudson (1999). To date, several authors have o�ered plausibleexplanations for the existence of SADs, the first of which came from McKenzie (2000) and was later refinedby Savage et al. (2012). In their interpretation, SADs are understood to be a sort of wake that forms inthe region behind a ‘shrinking magnetic flux tube’, whose existence is posited as the result of an isolatedreconnection event that occurs far above the limb, perhaps at the upper ‘Y-point’, just below the expandingCME.

This interpretation has been largely accepted for its seeming plausibility, but was not initially groundedin magnetohydrodynamics, and there are those who are critical of the model – the most common criticismbeing the fact that the dark lanes behind SADs are so well collimated and so long lived, neither of which isconsistent with the common perception of a wake. Subsequently, Scott et al. (2013) developed a model forSADs in which the retracting magnetic loop (whose origins are outside of the model) deforms the surroundingmagnetic field as it passes, which deformation constrains the velocity of the plasma along individual fieldlines and ultimately leads to the formation shocks and the appearance of a column of rarified plasma. Theyargued that the rarified, shocked column could be interpreted as a SAD and went on to o�er a few preliminaryestimates of the density ratio and plasma velocity profile that might be expected within the SAD, as wellas characterizing the pressure and, thus, the drag force that the surrounding plasma might exert on theretracting magnetic loop.

While the model of Scott et al. (2013) o�ers an explanation for the formation of dark lanes in the supra-arcade, it su�ers from two major limitations, the first being that it is predicated on the assumption that —(the ratio of thermal to magnetic energy density) is very low in the supra-arcade region; in the model, —is taken to be zero. Second, the model makes no claim regarding the formation of the retracting magneticloop; its existence is preassumed. Thus, the fundamental result of the model is predicated on the existenceof a feature that is not, itself, universally accepted by the solar community – an isolated, retracting magneticelement that pierces the supra-arcade structure would require an instance of ‘patchy reconnection’, whichmay or may not be plausible in the supra-arcade environment.

In order to address the first of these limitations, the same authors recently completed a numerical studyof the dynamics of a magnetized plasma as it flows around a rigid (circular) boundary (see Scott et al., inpreparation: 2016). This study su�ers from the same limitation as its predecessor in that it presupposes theexistence of a retracting magnetic element; however, it relaxes the zero-— assumption through the inclusionof an ideal induction equation and an evolving magnetic field, and therefore allows for arbitrary values of —in the initial configuration. Through this study, the authors showed that the shocked column predicted inScott et al. (2013) could persist even in cases of — . 1, provided that the speed of the retracting flux tubeis not in excess of the Alfven speed.

With the extension of the model of Savage et al. (2012) to energy distributions approaching — ≥ 1 thereare now four distinct models that each o�er a mechanism to describe the formation of SADs. In additionto the interpretation of Savage et al. (2012) there is the work of Cassak et al. (2013), who suggest thata continous reconnection process could lead to the formation of a column through which the reconnectionoutflow proceeds with successive magnetic elements stacking on top of one another to maintain a cohesivestructure. A third interpretation comes from Cecere et al. (2012), who suggest that an over-pressure conditionmight lead to the formation of shocks, which reflect and interfere with each other to form a low density feature.And, more recently, Guo et al. (2014) have performed simulations of supra-arcade reconnection with uniformresistivity in which they observed the formation of tear-drop like structures, much like SADs.

Each of these has its own merits and is likely to exist in some form in the solar corona but it remainsto be seen which, if any is a viable candidate to describe the apparent motion of supra-arcade plasmas. Inparticular, while the model of Scott et al. (2013) has been demonstrated for — . 1, with the collimatedshocks transforming into traditional shock cones as the speed of the retracting loops approaches and exceedsthe sound speed, the other three models each assumes — ≥ 0.5, and it is not clear how their results dependon this choice of —. For this reason, it is important to continue to explore the viability of each of thesemechanisms in the context of the supra-arcade region.

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The extension of these models to arbitrary values of — is particularly important in light of the recentwork of McKenzie (2013), who performed a PFSS extrapolation and compared the magnetic fiend strengthto published estimates of the temperature and density in the supra-arcade, and thereby estimated — in thesupra-arcade to be somewhere in the range of 4-12, well above the assumed value of — ≥ 0.5. In order tofurther explore the possibility of a high-— supra-arcade environment, Scott et al. (accepted: 2016) recentlyundertook another, parallel study in which they used EUV observations and DEM inversion techniques tofirst infer the electron density variations and associated velocity field, and then subsequently to estimatethe magnetic structure and associated energy density. Through this technique they estimated — to be oforder 10 in the supra-arcade region, though this estimate may be systematically high due to an assortmentof assumptions whose impacts cannot be easily quantified.

Clearly, an improved understanding of the observable aspects of the supra-arcade region requires contin-ued e�ort both in refining the current theoretical models and in improving what few estimates exist regardingthe ambient conditions of supra-arcade plasmas. And while there are many ways to proceed, any serioustreatment of the supra-arcade region should aim to achieve the following:

• Extension of contemporary models to arbitrary plasma-—:

The interpretation of Savage et al. (2012) has recently been shown to be valid for — Æ 1 given certainconditions, however, the models of Guo et al. (2014), Cecere et al. (2012), and Cassak et al. (2013)have not been extensively explored with a variable magnetic field strength as is necessary in order tounderstand their range of applicability.

• Analytical description of each e�ect:

Just as Scott et al. (2013) was first explored analytically before being confirmed numerically, theremaining three models should each be discussed in the context of a simplified analytical descriptionso that the fundamental driving mechanism behind each can be made more clear. For example, Guoet al. (2014) site the Rayleigh-Taylor instability to explain the formation of tear-drop like features intheir reconnection simulation. For this claim to be validated, a Rayleight-Taylor type analysis shouldbe applied to the conditions of their model to see if this is, in fact, the driving mechanism behind theirresult.

• Extension of each model to more complex geometries:

While the models of Cassak et al. (2013) and Cecere et al. (2012) have been seen in 3D, Guo et al.(2014) et al. relied on a 2.5D arrangement and Scott et al. (2013) relied on an explicitly 2D arrang-ment. For these models to be fully corroborated, it is important that each be imbedded in a fully 3Dsimulation in order to see whether their results stand up to the more complex geometry that is inherentin coronal plasmas

• Reconciliation with reconnection models:

Of these models, only Guo et al. (2014) uses actual reconnection processes in their explanation ofsupra-arcade dynamics. Since the supra-arcade is expected to coincide with a magnetic discontinuityand an associated current sheet, it is vital that each of these models should ultimately be reconciled withthe dynamics of such a current sheet. Scott et al. (2013), for example, rely on an instance of ‘patchyreconnection’; however, until that e�ect is seen in the context of a simulation in which reconnection isaccounted for, the results of the model will remain suspect.

3

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Proposed Research

While it is important that the community proceed with several avenues of research simultaneously, I intendto focus my e�orts on two specific aspects: the expansion of the analytical and numerical models of Scottet al. (2013, in preparation: 2016) and then reconciliation of these results with ongoing research in magneticreconnection. Through these e�orts I hope to further our understanding of plasma dynamics both in thesupra-arcade and in other areas by way of inference. And I further hope to help make the study of supra-arcade plasma and the details of current sheet dynamics more cohesive. Not long ago these were consideredone and the same. More recently there has been a divergence; the current sheet and the surrounding plasmaare understood to be distinct and are often treated separately. It is my hope that we can begin to appreciatethat these two aspects of MHD are distinct and yet fundamentally linked and that only by treating thesystem self consistently can we begin to make real progress.

While the findings of Scott et al. (2013) are suggestive of SADs (see Fig. 2, upper panel) in the regimewhere — Æ 1 and flow speed is below the Alfven speed, the current implementation assumes an isothermalplasma and it remains to be seen whether these e�ects remain valid after the inclusion of viscous heating andthermal conduction. Further, in the current implementation the retracting flux tube descends at a constantspeed relative to the solar limb and the ambient plasma density is assumed to be uniform (atmosphericstratification and gravitational e�ects are ignored). Clearly there is room to extend this model throughthe inclusion of acceleration terms and gravitational e�ects, and while early e�orts have been made to thisend (see Fig. 2, lower panel), a more sophisticated treatment is needed. In this way, the interpretation ofthese results can be more carefully considered in the context of the supra-arcade environment, where SADsinteract with a non-uniform atmosphere and are known to decelerate as they approach the limb.

Additionally, there are many models that invoke the interaction of a moving magnetic loop with thesurrounding plasma but fail to account for the details of this interaction – the thin flux tube model of Linton& Longcope (2006) is one such. In that model, a reconnected flux element evolves under the influence ofits own magnetic tension but with no regard for the interaction with the surrounding plasma. By extendingthe numerical model that was developed in Scott et al. (in preparation: 2016) to account for an acceleratingframe (which can be made proportional to the pressure exerted on the surface of the magnetic loop) it ispossible to characterize the drag force and kinematic evolution of such a flux tube and the result of thisinvestigation can be made general so as to be applicable to a variety of other models.

To further support this investigation I intend to perform a number of parallel studies. Since the TearingMode instability in current sheets with large Lundquist number is already a topic of great interest, partic-ularly of late, it seems only appropriate that other types of instabilities should also be considered in thiscontext, specifically the Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) and Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instabilities, both of which havebeen cited in reference to supra-arcade downflows. In particular, the analysis of Verwichte et al. (2005)suggested that the dark lanes that form the tail of SADs support transverse, surface mode oscillations andthey characterized their amplitude and phase velocity. If these dark lanes are the result of strong densitygradients (as opposed to a thermal e�ect), and if there is a shear velocity (as suggested by Scott et al., 2013)then these features should be susceptible to the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability.

I intend to generalize previous results regarding KH growth rates to the case of field aligned shear flowswith density gradients perpendicular to the magnetic field. In this way, the results of Verwichte et al. (2005)can be reconciled with estimates of the field strength and plasma density in the supra-arcade region andhopefully used to better constrain our understanding of the associated energy distribution. Likewise, Guoet al. (2014), have indicated Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities as the mechanism behind the formation of SADsin their simulations. Since the supra-arcade is not typically characterized by density inversions, as is usuallythe case in RT analysis, the instability must be a result of stratified tension in the di�using magnetic fieldas it reconnects. However, a detailed analysis of instability formation has not been presented in this caseand is sorely needed if the interpretation of Guo et al. (2014) is to be upheld.

Following the completion of this study, I intend to undertake an investigation of the dynamics of retractingflux ropes in three dimensions. This study, much like that of Guo et al. (2014), will consider a single,volume filling magnetic field, as opposed to the topologically distinct interior boundary employed in Scottet al. (2013). However, unlike Guo et al. (2014), I intend to generalize the reconnection process through

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0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 1.75 2.00

β = 0.1, Ms = 1.0 β = 0.1, Ms = 1.5 β = 0.5, Ms = 1.0 β = 0.5, Ms = 1.5

-10 -5 0 5 10

-20

0

20

-10 -5 0 5 10

-20

0

20

-10 -5 0 5 10

-20

0

20

-10 -5 0 5 10

-20

0

20

-10 -5 0 5 10

-20

0

20

t = 0 ts t = 20 ts t = 40 ts t = 60 ts t = 80 ts

1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0

Figure 2: Simulation results for plasma flow in the vicinity of a retracing flux tube are shown in the upperpanel, with field lines traced in black. The lower panel demonstrates a preliminary study of a retracting fluxtube in a stratified atmosphere. Both simulations were performed with uniform, constant temperature. Ineach, the small black circle at the center of the domain represents the imbedded flux tube while the colortable indicates normalized plasma density.

the inclusion of spatially variable resistivity in order to allow for instances of ‘patchy reconnection’, asdescribed in Linton & Longcope (2006). In this way, the occurrence of a reconnected flux tube, whichretracts under its own tension while simultaneously interacting with the surrounding field and plasma, canbe treated self-consistently. The details of this model will incorporate the results of recent advancements inour understanding of current sheet evolution and turbulent resistivity – it is not enough to merely posit theexistence of a region of anomalous resistivity; the magnetic di�usivity must be related to the fundamentalnature of the current sheet in a way that is consistent with contemporary results.

Recently there has been a renewed interest in the initiation and evolution of fast reconnection and itstriggering, namely the so-called ‘plasmoid instability’ and more specifically the concept of ‘ideal’ tearing, asdeveloped by the group of Prof. Marco Velli at UCLA (Pucci & Velli, 2014). The latter approach has led to anew scenario which is able not only to explain the observed fast reconnection rates, but also to account for thetrigger mechanism, in opposition to the scenarios that have emerged over the years relying essentially on theparadigmatic Sweet-Parker model. The extension of this model to realistic coronal configurations includingcoronal arcades and SADs has not yet been attempted, though it is in some sense a crucial component of thework that I have proposed to do here. In addition, Prof. Velli at UCLA has done work related to my ownon flows and their acceleration and stability, with expertise complementary to my own work on flows aroundan obstacle. For this reason I am encouraged to propose and to carry out the research of this proposal, ifgranted, at UCLA with the supervision of Prof. Velli.

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Relevance to the Living With a Star Program

As stated in the program description, the “Living [W]ith a Star [Program] emphasizes the science necessaryto understand those aspects of the Sun and space environment that most directly a�ect life and society,”to which end the program attempts to cultivate research to address the following questions: How and whydoes the Sun vary? How does the Earth respond? What are the impacts to humanity?

Perhaps the most immediate causal relationship in the Sun-Earth connection, beyond the steady balanceof absorption and reradiating of electromagnetic energy, is the constant and erratic bombardment of theEarth by Solar Energetic Particles (SEPs), i.e. Solar Storms. These are often related to solar energeticevents, e.g. flares and CMEs, whose triggering mechanisms are not well understood. Coronal currents andcompact current layers are obviously connected to the temporal evolution of active regions, and play a rolein regulating the build up and release of magnetic energy, but the transition from slow to fast reconnection(e.g. the onset of plasmoid instabilities) remains a much debated topic of great interest and importance.As coronal currents cannot be detected directly, continued e�orts toward modeling the evolution of plasmasin the vicinity of assumed currents and instances of magnetic reconnection is crucial to improving ourunderstanding of these processes. And since the region above a flare loop arcade is assumed to be host tocompact current layer, or current sheet, an improved understanding supra-arcade dynamics, i.e. SADs, aswell as current sheet dynamics, and how they interact, is intimately related to advancing our knowledge ofreconnection in general.

For these reasons, I feel that the study of supra-arcade dynamics is an important one, with implicationsnot only to reconnection models but also to our understanding of the interaction between, and responseof the plasma to, the various forcing terms in magnetohydrodynamics. And while some models currentlyexist to explain observational aspects of the supra-arcade region, none is currently able to treat the bulkplasma evolution and the interior dynamics of the current sheet simultaneously. Therefore, a self consistentmodel that draws on contemporary research into current sheet formation and dynamics in order to motivatesuch macroscopic parameters as magnetic di�usivity, is critical for the advancement of our understanding ofreconnection, and thereby our broader understanding of solar energetic events and space weather as a whole.

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