The Institute of Numerical Modelling (INM) at the UL Faculty of Science and Technology (FST) will host weekly scientific seminars every Thursday. All interested participants are welcome to attend as listeners. For the 7-th weekly INM seminar this week (Dec 4, 13:00--14:30, Room 523. at INM), we have a guest (remotely) from ETH Zurich, Switzerland -- Sergey Konstantin Ermakov.

Sergey is a Research Assistant at the Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI), an organization INM has a long-term partnership with in the field of multiphase MHD, and he is also a Research Assistant at the ETH-Z Quantum Center. Sergey will present his latest work in the field of plasma physics, and will speak about "Radiative Signatures of Magnetic Reconnection: An Approach to Remote Probing of Reconnection Dynamics"

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Sergey Konstantin Ermakov – “Radiative Signatures of Magnetic Reconnection: An Approach to Remote Probing of Reconnection Dynamics”
https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.10768

Magnetic reconnection drives a wide range of astrophysical phenomena, including geomagnetic storms, solar flares, and activity in blazars. However, direct measurement of key reconnection observables remains challenging due to the remote and extreme nature of these environments. While high-energy particle showers observed on Earth are often attributed to reconnection, the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood, and clear diagnostic signatures are lacking. We present a theoretical, data-driven approach for identifying reconnection radiation signatures and enabling remote diagnostics of reconnection in astrophysical setting s through radiation spectra. Using particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of magnetic reconnection, we generate radiation spectra and establish connections between spectral features and the underlying reconnection dynamics. We develop a method to estimate the ratio of the reconnection electric field to the plasmoid magnetic field from spectral data. Analytic calculations show that other parameters can be extracted in the ultra-relativistic reconnection regime, such as the magnetic field or the current sheet width.