ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Evidence for Asymmetry in the Velocity Distribution of the Interstellar Neutral Helium Flow Observed by IBEX and Ulysses

71   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Brian E. Wood
 تاريخ النشر 2019
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We use observations from the Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) and Ulysses to explore the possibility that the interstellar neutral helium flowing through the inner solar system possesses an intrinsic non-Maxwellian velocity distribution. In fitting the IBEX and Ulysses data, we experiment with both a kappa distribution and a bi-Maxwellian, instead of the usual Maxwellian assumption. The kappa distribution does not improve the quality of fit to either the IBEX or Ulysses data, and we find lower limits to the kappa parameter of kappa>12.1 and kappa>6.0 from the IBEX and Ulysses analyses, respectively. In contrast, we do find evidence that a bi-Maxwellian improves fit quality. For IBEX, there is a clear preferred bi-Maxwellian solution with T_perp/T_par=0.62+/-0.11 oriented about an axis direction with ecliptic coordinates (lambda_axis,b_axis)=(57.2+/-8.9 deg,-1.6+/-5.9 deg). The Ulysses data provide support for this result, albeit with lower statistical significance. The axis direction is close to the ISM flow direction, in a heliocentric rest frame, and is therefore unlikely to be indicative of velocity distribution asymmetries intrinsic to the ISM. It is far more likely that these results indicate the presence of asymmetries induced by interactions in the outer heliosphere.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Direct-sampling observations of interstellar neutral (ISN) He by Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) provide valuable insight into the physical state of and processes operating in the interstellar medium ahead of the heliosphere. The ISN He atom si gnals are observed at the four lowest ESA steps of the IBEX-Lo sensor. The observed signal is a mixture of the primary and secondary components of ISN He and H. Previously, only data from one of the ESA steps have been used. Here, we extended the analysis to data collected in the three lowest ESA steps with the strongest ISN He signal, for the observation seasons 2009-2015. The instrument sensitivity is modeled as a linear function of the atom impact speed onto the sensors conversion surface separately for each ESA step of the instrument. We found that the sensitivity increases from lower to higher ESA steps, but within each of the ESA steps it is a decreasing function of the atom impact speed. This result may be influenced by the hydrogen contribution, which was not included in the adopted model, but seems to exist in the signal. We conclude that the currently accepted temperature of ISN He and velocity of the Sun through the interstellar medium do not need a revision, and we sketch a plan of further data analysis aiming at investigating ISN H and a better understanding of the population of ISN He originating in the outer heliosheath.
With the velocity vector and temperature of the pristine interstellar neutral (ISN) He recently obtained with high precision from a coordinated analysis summarized by McComas et al.2015b, we analyzed the IBEX observations of neutral He left out from this analysis. These observations were collected during the ISN observation seasons 2010---2014 and cover the region in the Earths orbit where the Warm Breeze persists. We used the same simulation model and a very similar parameter fitting method to that used for the analysis of ISN He. We approximated the parent population of the Warm Breeze in front of the heliosphere with a homogeneous Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution function and found a temperature of $sim 9,500$ K, an inflow speed of 11.3 km s$^{-1}$, and an inflow longitude and latitude in the J2000 ecliptic coordinates $251.6^circ$, $12.0^circ$. The abundance of the Warm Breeze relative to the interstellar neutral He is 5.7% and the Mach number is 1.97. The newly found inflow direction of the Warm Breeze, the inflow directions of ISN H and ISN He, and the direction to the center of IBEX Ribbon are almost perfectly co-planar, and this plane coincides within relatively narrow statistical uncertainties with the plane fitted only to the inflow directions of ISN He, ISN H, and the Warm Breeze. This co-planarity lends support to the hypothesis that the Warm Breeze is the secondary population of ISN He and that the center of the Ribbon coincides with the direction of the local interstellar magnetic field. The common plane for the direction of inflow of ISN gas, ISN H, the Warm Breeze, and the local interstellar magnetic field %includes the Sun and is given by the normal direction: ecliptic longitude $349.7^circ pm 0.6^circ$ and latitude $35.7^circ pm 0.6^circ$ in the J2000 coordinates, with the correlation coefficient of 0.85.
Interstellar neutral gas atoms penetrate the heliopause and reach 1~au, where they are detected by IBEX. The flow of neutral interstellar helium through the perturbed interstellar plasma in the outer heliosheath (OHS) results in creation of the secon dary population of interstellar He atoms, the so-called Warm Breeze, due to charge exchange with perturbed ions. The secondary population brings the imprint of the OHS conditions to the IBEX-Lo instrument. Based on a global simulation of the heliosphere with measurement-based parameters and detailed kinetic simulation of the filtration of He in the OHS, we find the number density of interstellar He$^+$ population at $(8.98pm 0.12)times 10^{-3}$~cm$^{-3}$. With this, we obtain the absolute density of interstellar H$^+$ $5.4times 10^{-2}$~cm$^{-3}$ and electrons $6.3times 10^{-2}$~cm$^{-3}$, and ionization degrees of H 0.26 and He 0.37. The results agree with estimates of the Very Local Interstellar Matter parameters obtained from fitting the observed spectra of diffuse interstellar EUV and soft X-Ray background.
414 - M. Bzowski 2012
Neutral Interstellar Helium (NISHe) is almost unaffected at the heliospheric interface with the interstellar medium and freely enters the solar system. It provides some of the best information on the characteristics of the interstellar gas in the Loc al Interstellar Cloud. The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) is the second mission to directly detect NISHe. We present a comparison between recent IBEX NISHe observations and simulations carried out using a well-tested quantitative simulation code. Simulation and observation results compare well for times when measured fluxes are dominated by NISHe (and contributions from other species are small). Differences between simulations and observations indicate a previously undetected secondary population of neutral helium, likely produced by interaction of interstellar helium with plasma in the outer heliosheath. Interstellar neutral parameters are statistically different from previous in situ results obtained mostly from the GAS/Ulysses experiment, but they do agree with the local interstellar flow vector obtained from studies of interstellar absorption: the newly-established flow direction is ecliptic longitude 79.2 deg, latitude -5.1 deg, the velocity is sim 22.8 km/s, and the temperature is 6200 K. These new results imply a markedly lower absolute velocity of the gas and thus significantly lower dynamic pressure on the boundaries of the heliosphere and different orientation of the Hydrogen Deflection Plane compared to prior results from Ulysses. A different orientation of this plane also suggests a new geometry of the interstellar magnetic field and the lower dynamic pressure calls for a compensation by other components of the pressure balance, most likely a higher density of interstellar plasma and strength of interstellar magnetic field.
Large magnetic structures are launched away from the Sun during solar eruptions. They are observed as (interplanetary) coronal mass ejections (ICMEs or CMEs) with coronal and heliospheric imagers. A fraction of them are observed insitu as magnetic cl ouds (MCs). Fitting these structures properly with a model requires a better understanding of their evolution. In situ measurements are done locally when the spacecraft trajectory crosses the magnetic configuration. These observations are taken for different elements of plasma and at different times, and are therefore biased by the expansion of the magnetic configuration. This aging effect leads to stronger magnetic fields measured at the front than at the rear of MCs, an asymmetry often present in MC data. However, can the observed asymmetry be explained quantitatively only from the expansion? Based on self-similar expansion, we derive a method to estimate the expansion rate from observed plasma velocity. We next correct for the aging effect both the observed magnetic field and the spatial coordinate along the spacecraft trajectory. This provides corrected data as if the MC internal structure was observed at the same time. We apply the method to 90 best observed MCs near Earth (1995-2012). The aging effect is the main source of the observed magnetic asymmetry only for 28% of MCs. After correcting the aging effect, the asymmetry is almost symmetrically distributed between MCs with a stronger magnetic field at the front and those at the rear of MCs. The proposed method can efficiently remove the aging bias within insitu data of MCs, and more generally of ICMEs. This allows one to analyse the data with a spatial coordinate, such as in models or remote sensing observations.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا