121 research outputs found
Efficient electron heating in relativistic shocks and gamma ray burst afterglow
Electrons in shocks are efficiently energized due to the cross-shock
potential, which develops because of differential deflection of electrons and
ions by the magnetic field in the shock front. The electron energization is
necessarily accompanied by scattering and thermalization. The mechanism is
efficient in both magnetized and non-magnetized relativistic electron-ion
shocks. It is proposed that the synchrotron emission from the heated electrons
in a layer of strongly enhanced magnetic field is responsible for gamma ray
burst afterglows.Comment: revtex
Nonzero electron temperature effects in nonlinear mirror modes
The nonlinear theory of the magnetic mirror instability (MI) accounting for nonzero electron temperature effects is developed. Based on our previous low-frequency approach to the analysis of this instability and including nonzero electron temperature effects a set of equations describing nonlinear dynamics of mirror modes is derived. In the linear limit a Fourier transform of these equations recovers the linear MI growth rate in which the finite ion Larmor radius and nonzero electron temperature effects are taken into account. When the electron temperature T-e becomes of the same order as the parallel ion temperature T the growth rate of the MI is reduced by the presence of a parallel electric field. The latter arises because the electrons are dragged by nonresonant ions which are mirror accelerated from regions of high to low parallel magnetic flux. The nonzero electron temperature effect also substantially modifies the mirror mode nonlinear dynamics. When T-e similar or equal to T the transition from the linear to nonlinear regime occurred for wave amplitudes that are only half that which was inherent to the cold electron temperature limit. Further nonlinear dynamics developed with the explosive formation of magnetic holes, ending with a saturated state in the form of solitary structures or cnoidal waves. This shows that the incorporation of nonzero temperature results in a weak decrease in their spatial dimensions of the holes and increase in their depth
Kinetic description of avalanching systems
Avalanching systems are treated analytically using the renormalization group
(in the self-organized-criticality regime) or mean-field approximation,
respectively. The latter describes the state in terms of the mean number of
active and passive sites, without addressing the inhomogeneity in their
distribution. This paper goes one step further by proposing a kinetic
description of avalanching systems making use of the distribution function for
clusters of active sites. We illustrate application of the kinetic formalism to
a model proposed for the description of the avalanching processes in the
reconnecting current sheet of the Earth magnetosphere.Comment: 9 page
Width dependent collisionless electron dynamics in the static fields of the shock ramp, 1, Single particle behavior and implications for downstream distribution
International audienceWe study the collisionless dynamics of electrons in the shock ramp using the numerical trajectory analysis in the model electric and magnetic fields of the shock. Even with very modest assumptions about the cross-shock potential the electron trajectories are very sensitive to the width of the ramp. The character of electron motion changes from the fully adiabatic (with conservation of v2 /B) when the ramp is wide, to the nonadiabatic one, when the ramp becomes sufficiently narrow. The downstream electron distribution also changes drastically, although this change depends on the initial electron temperature
Relativistic filamentary equilibria
Plasma filamentation is often encountered in collisionless shocks and inertial confinement fusion. We develop a general analytical description of the two-dimensional relativistic filamentary equilibrium and derive the conditions for existence of potential-free equilibria. A pseudopotential equation for the vector-potential is constructed for cold and relativistic Maxwellian distributions. The role of counter-streaming is explained. We present single current sheet and periodic current sheet solutions, and analyze the equilibria with electric potential. These solutions can be used to study linear and nonlinear evolution of the relativistic filamentation instabilit
Determination of the dispersion of low frequency waves downstream of a quasiperpendicular collisionless shock
International audienceA method of wave mode determination, which was announced in Balikhin and Gedalin, is applied to AMPTE UKS and AMPTE IRM magnetic field measurements downstream of supercritical quasiperpendicular shock. The method is based on the fact that the relation between phase difference of the waves measured by two satellites, Doppler shift equation, the direction of the wave propagation are enough to obtain the dispersion equation of the observed waves. It is shown that the low frequency turbulence mainly consists of waves observed below 1 Hz with a linear dependence between the absolute value of wave vector |k| and the plasma frame wave frequency. The phase velocity of these waves is close to the phase velocity of intermediate waves Vint = Vacos(?)
Nonlinear Mirror and Weibel modes: peculiarities of quasi-linear dynamics
A theory for nonlinear evolution of the mirror modes near
the instability threshold is developed. It is shown that during initial
stage the major instability saturation is provided by the flattening of the
velocity distribution function in the vicinity of small parallel ion
velocities. The relaxation scenario in this case is accompanied by rapid
attenuation of resonant particle interaction which is replaced by a weaker
adiabatic interaction with mirror modes. The saturated plasma state can be
considered as a magnetic counterpart to electrostatic BGK modes. After
quasi-linear saturation a further nonlinear scenario is controlled by the
mode coupling effects and nonlinear variation of the ion Larmor radius. Our
analytical model is verified by relevant numerical simulations. Test
particle and PIC simulations indeed show that it is a modification of
distribution function at small parallel velocities that results in fading
away of free energy driving the mirror mode. The similarity with resonant
Weibel instability is discussed
Electron flux models for different energies at geostationary orbit
Forecast models were derived for energetic electrons at all energy ranges sampled by the third-generation Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES). These models were based on Multi-Input Single-Output Nonlinear Autoregressive Moving Average with Exogenous inputs methodologies. The model inputs include the solar wind velocity, density and pressure, the fraction of time that the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) was southward, the IMF contribution of a solar wind-magnetosphere coupling function proposed by Boynton et al. (2011b), and the Dst index. As such, this study has deduced five new 1 h resolution models for the low-energy electrons measured by GOES (30–50 keV, 50–100 keV, 100–200 keV, 200–350 keV, and 350–600 keV) and extended the existing >800 keV and >2 MeV Geostationary Earth Orbit electron fluxes models to forecast at a 1 h resolution. All of these models were shown to provide accurate forecasts, with prediction efficiencies ranging between 66.9% and 82.3%
Editorial honoring the 2018 reviewers for JGR Space Physics
The Editors of the Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics would like to honor and thank the 2018 manuscript reviewers for the journal. This is a large‐scale, community‐wide effort for which 1,358 scientists submitted 3,027 reviews in 2018. We understand that this is a volunteer task and we greatly appreciate your time and effort to fulfill this service role back to the research community
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