A force-free magnetic field is a type of field which arises as a special case from the magnetostatic equation in plasmas. This special case arises when the plasma pressure is so small, relative to the magnetic pressure, that the plasma pressure may be ignored, and so only the magnetic pressure is considered. The name "force-free" comes from being able to neglect the force from the plasma.
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Start with the simplified magnetostatic equations, in which the effects of gravity may be neglected:
Supposing that the gas pressure is small compared to the magnetic pressure, i.e.,
then the pressure term can be neglected, and we have:
.
This equation implies that: . e.g. the current density is either zero or parallel to the magnetic field, and where is a spatial-varying function to be determined. Combining this equation with Maxwell's equations:
.
... and the vector identity:
... leads to a pair of equations for and :
In the corona of the sun, the ratio of the gas pressure to the magnetic pressure is ~0.004, and so there the magnetic field is force-free.
and