Do you want to publish a course? Click here

Kinetic Scale Slow Solar Wind Turbulence in the Inner Heliosphere: Co-existence of Kinetic Alfven Waves and Alfven Ion Cyclotron Waves

95   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Nahuel Andres
 Publication date 2020
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

The nature of the plasma wave modes around the ion kinetic scales in highly Alfvenic slow solar wind turbulence is investigated using data from the NASAs Parker Solar Probe taken in the inner heliosphere, at 0.18 Astronomical Unit (AU) from the sun. The joint distribution of the normalized reduced magnetic helicity ${sigma}_m ({theta}_{RB}, {tau})$ is obtained, where ${theta}_{RB}$ is the angle between the local mean magnetic field and the radial direction and ${tau}$ is the temporal scale. Two populations around ion scales are identified: the first population has ${sigma}_m ({theta}_{RB}, {tau}) < 0$ for frequencies (in the spacecraft frame) ranging from 2.1 to 26 Hz for $60^{circ} < {theta}_{RB} < 130^{circ}$, corresponding to kinetic Alfven waves (KAWs), and the second population has ${sigma}_m ({theta}_{RB}, {tau}) > 0$ in the frequency range [1.4, 4.9] Hz for ${theta}_{RB} > 150^{circ}$, corresponding to Alfven ion Cyclotron Waves (ACWs). This demonstrates for the first time the co-existence of KAWs and ACWs in the slow solar wind in the inner heliosphere, which contrasts with previous observations in the slow solar wind at 1 AU. This discrepancy between 0.18 and 1 AU could be explained, either by i) a dissipation of ACWs via cyclotron resonance during their outward journey, or by ii) the high Alfvenicity of the slow solar wind at 0.18 AU that may be favorable for the excitation of ACWs.



rate research

Read More

The recently released spacecraft potential measured by the RPW instrument on-board Solar Orbiter has been used to estimate the solar wind electron density in the inner heliosphere. Solar-wind electron density measured during June 2020 has been analysed to obtain a thorough characterization of the turbulence and intermittency properties of the fluctuations. Magnetic field data have been used to describe the presence of ion-scale waves. Selected intervals have been extracted to study and quantify the properties of turbulence. The Empirical Mode Decomposition has been used to obtain the generalized marginal Hilbert spectrum, equivalent to the structure functions analysis, and additionally reducing issues typical of non-stationary, short time series. The presence of waves was quantitatively determined introducing a parameter describing the time-dependent, frequency-filtered wave power. A well defined inertial range with power-law scaling has been found almost everywhere. However, the Kolmogorov scaling and the typical intermittency effects are only present in part of the samples. Other intervals have shallower spectra and more irregular intermittency, not described by models of turbulence. These are observed predominantly during intervals of enhanced ion frequency wave activity. Comparisons with compressible magnetic field intermittency (from the MAG instrument) and with an estimate of the solar wind velocity (using electric and magnetic field) are also provided to give general context and help determine the cause for the anomalous fluctuations.
We investigate compressive turbulence at sub-ion scales with measurements from the Magnetospheric MultiScale Mission. The tetrahedral configuration and high time resolution density data obtained by calibrating spacecraft potential allow an investigation of the turbulent density fluctuations in the solar wind and their three-dimensional structure in the sub-ion range. The wave-vector associated with the highest energy density at each spacecraft frequency is obtained by application of the Multi-point signal resonator technique to the four-point density data. The fluctuations show a strong wave-vector anisotropy $k_{perp}gg k_{parallel}$ where the parallel and perpendicular symbols are with respect to the mean magnetic field direction. The plasma frame frequencies show two populations, one below the proton cyclotron frequency $omega<Omega_{ci}$ consistent with kinetic Alfven wave (KAW) turbulence. The second component has higher frequencies $omega > Omega_{ci}$ consistent with ion Bernstein wave (IBW) turbulence. Alternatively, these fluctuations may constitute KAWs that have undergone multiple wave-wave interactions causing a broadening in the plasma frame frequencies. The scale-dependent kurtosis in this wave-vector region shows a reduction in intermittency at the small scales which can also be explained by the presence of wave activity. Our results suggest that small-scale turbulence exhibits linear-wave properties of kinetic Alfven and possibly ion-Bernstein/magnetosonic waves. Based on our results, we speculate that these waves may play a role in describing the observed reduction in intermittency at sub ion scales.
In the present paper, we investigate the power-law behaviour of the magnetic field spectra in the Earths magnetosheath region using Cluster spacecraft data under solar minimum condition. The power spectral density of the magnetic field data and spectral slopes at various frequencies are analysed. Propagation angle and compressibility are used to test the nature of turbulent fluctuations. The magnetic field spectra have the spectral slopes between -1.5 to 0 down to spatial scales of 20 ion gyroradius and show clear evidence of a transition to steeper spectra for small scales with a second power-law, having slopes between -2.6 to -1.8. At low frequencies, f_sc<0.3f_ci(where f_ci is ion gyro-frequency), propagation angle approximately 90 degrees to the mean magnetic field, B_0, and compressibility shows a broad distribution, 0.1 < R > 0.9. On the other hand at f_sc>10f_ci, the propagation angle exhibits a broad range between 30-90 degree while R has a small variation: 0.2 < R > 0.5. We conjecture that at high frequencies, the perpendicularly propagating Alfven waves could partly explain the statistical analysis of spectra. To support our prediction of kinetic Alfven wave-dominated spectral slope behaviour at high frequency, we also present a theoretical model and simulate the magnetic field turbulence spectra due to the nonlinear evolution of kinetic Alfven waves. The present study also shows the analogy between the observational and simulated spectra.
The anisotropy of solar wind turbulence is a critical issue in understanding the physics of energy transfer between scales and energy conversion between fields and particles in the heliosphere. Using the measurement of emph{Parker Solar Probe} (emph{PSP}), we present an observation of the anisotropy at kinetic scales in the slow, Alfvenic, solar wind in the inner heliosphere. textbf{The magnetic compressibility behaves as expected for kinetic Alfvenic turbulence below the ion scale.} A steepened transition range is found between the inertial and kinetic ranges in all directions with respect to the local background magnetic field direction. The anisotropy of $k_perp gg k_parallel$ is found evident in both transition and kinetic ranges, with the power anisotropy $P_perp/P_parallel > 10$ in the kinetic range leading over that in the transition range and being stronger than that at 1 au. The spectral index varies from $alpha_{tparallel}=-5.7pm 1.0$ to $alpha_{tperp}=-3.7pm 0.3$ in the transition range and $alpha_{kparallel}=-3.12pm 0.22$ to $alpha_{kperp}=-2.57pm 0.09$ in the kinetic range. The corresponding wavevector anisotropy has the scaling of $k_parallel sim k_perp^{0.71pm 0.17}$ in the transition range, and changes to $k_parallel sim k_perp^{0.38pm 0.09}$ in the kinetic range, consistent with the kinetic Alfvenic turbulence at sub-ion scales.
Phase space holes, double layers and other solitary electric field structures, referred to as time domain structures (TDSs), often occur around dipolarization fronts in the Earths inner magnetosphere. They are considered to be important because of their role in the dissipation of the injection energy and their potential for significant particle scattering and acceleration. Kinetic Alfven waves are observed to be excited during energetic particle injections, and are typically present in conjunction with TDS observations. Despite the availability of a large number of spacecraft observations, the origin of TDSs and their relation to kinetic Alfven waves remains poorly understood to date. Part of the difficulty arises from the vast scale separations between kinetic Alfven waves and TDSs. Here, we demonstrate that TDSs can be excited by electrons in nonlinear Landau resonance with kinetic Alfven waves. These electrons get trapped by the parallel electric field of kinetic Alfven waves, form localized beam distributions, and subsequently generate TDSs through beam instabilities. A big picture emerges as follows: macroscale dipolarization fronts first transfer the ion flow (kinetic) energy to kinetic Alfven waves at intermediate scale, which further channel the energy to TDSs at the microscale and eventually deposit the energy to the thermal electrons in the form of heating. In this way, the ion flow energy associated with dipolarization fronts is effectively dissipated in a cascade from large to small scales in the inner magnetosphere.
comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا