Resistive skin time

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The resistive skin time is a characteristic time of typical magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) phenomena, describing the diffusion time associated with a resistive wall mode (RWM).[1] Due to this, it is also sometimes referred to as the wall skin time or resistive wall skin time.

Definition

The resistive skin time is defined as: τR=μ0a2η where η is the resistivity, a is a typical radius of the RWM and μ0 is the magnetic permeability.[2]Template:NoteTag This formula is distinct from, but analogous to the generalized diffusion time formula t=a2D, where D is the diffusion coefficient.[3][4] The interpretation of this means that the quantity ημ0 (which has units of m2s) serves as the diffusion coefficient when describing RWMs.

Uses

While the resistive skin time is often referenced in journals concerning RWMs,[2][5][6] it is almost never a primary focus of the study, but rather a time scale used to reference other occurrences in the RWM. Most commonly, it is used to describe events whose timescales are short enough that the overall evolution of the RWM has little impact on individual events. It may also be compared to the Alfvén time, to describe a specific wave interation with the RWM.[7]

Notes

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References


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