Barta, M.; Büchner, J.; Karlicky, M.; Skala, J.: Role of plasmoids in energy cascade in magnetic reconnection in solar corona. 40th COSPAR Scientific Assembly, Moscow, Russia (2014)
Büchner, J.: Collisionless reconnection in the solar corona. International E. Parker Workshop on magnetic reconnection, Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil (2014)
Büchner, J.: Collisionlesss reconnection at the Sun for strong guide fields. R2014 -International Workshop on Magnetic Reconnection, Tokyo, Japan (2014)
Büchner, J.: Sub-Grid-Scale (SGS) Approach to the Turbulent Dynamo and Magnetic Reconnection. Zeldovich-100, International Astrophysical Conference, Moscow, Russia (2014)
Büchner, J.: Influence of turbulence on reconnection by SGS MHD models and their calibration on plasma models beyond MHD: Hybrid and PIC code kinetic simulations. Max-Planck-Princeton Center for Plasma Physics Annual Meeting, Berlin, Germany (2014)
Muñoz, P. A.; Kilian, P.; Büchner, J.: PIC-code simulation of spontaneous instabilities of current sheets: anisotropic heating and guide field influence on magnetic reconnection. 40th COSPAR Scientific Assembly, Moscow, Russia (2014)
Savin, S.; Amata, E.; Büchner, J.; Klimov, S.; Kronberg, E.; Zelenyi, L.; others: Study of Discrete and Turbulent Cascades in the Outer Magnetosphere: Resonances and Transport. Annual Meeting of the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society , Sapporo, Japan (2014)
Yang, S.; Büchner, J.; Santos, J. C.; Zhang, H.: Modeling the relative magnetic helicity in MHD simulations and its application to solar activity. 40th COSPAR Scientific Assembly, Moscow, Russia (2014)
Widmer, F.; Büchner, J.; Yokoi, N.; Schmidt, W.: Turbulent MHD Magnetic Reconnection using Sub-grid Scale Modelling. Turbulence, magnetic fields and self organization in laboratory and astrophysical plasmas, Les Houches, France (2015)
A star’s chemical composition strongly influences the ultraviolet radiation it emits into space and thus the conditions for the emergence of life in its neighbourhood.
A single star has provided information about the collision of the Milky Way with the dwarf galaxy Gaia-Enceladus. The event likely took place approximately 11.5 billion years ago.