3,707 research outputs found
Damping of Electron Density Structures and Implications for Interstellar Scintillation
The forms of electron density structures in kinetic Alfven wave turbulence
are studied in connection with scintillation. The focus is on small scales cm where the Kinetic Alfv\'en wave (KAW) regime is active in
the interstellar medium. MHD turbulence converts to a KAW cascade, starting at
10 times the ion gyroradius and continuing to smaller scales. These scales are
inferred to dominate scintillation in the theory of Boldyrev et al. From
numerical solutions of a decaying kinetic Alfv\'en wave turbulence model,
structure morphology reveals two types of localized structures, filaments and
sheets, and shows that they arise in different regimes of resistive and
diffusive damping. Minimal resistive damping yields localized current filaments
that form out of Gaussian-distributed initial conditions. When resistive
damping is large relative to diffusive damping, sheet-like structures form. In
the filamentary regime, each filament is associated with a non-localized
magnetic and density structure, circularly symmetric in cross section. Density
and magnetic fields have Gaussian statistics (as inferred from Gaussian-valued
kurtosis) while density gradients are strongly non-Gaussian, more so than
current. This enhancement of non-Gaussian statistics in a derivative field is
expected since gradient operations enhance small-scale fluctuations. The
enhancement of density gradient kurtosis over current kurtosis is not obvious,
yet it suggests that modest fluctuation levels in electron density may yield
large scintillation events during pulsar signal propagation in the interstellar
medium. In the sheet regime the same statistical observations hold, despite the
absence of localized filamentary structures. Probability density functions are
constructed from statistical ensembles in both regimes, showing clear formation
of long, highly non-Gaussian tails
Turbulent Origin of the Galactic-Center Magnetic Field: Nonthermal Radio Filaments
A great deal of study has been carried out over the last twenty years on the
origin of the magnetic activity in the Galactic center. One of the most popular
hypotheses assumes milli-Gauss magnetic field with poloidal geometry, pervading
the inner few hundred parsecs of the Galactic-center region. However, there is
a growing observational evidence for the large-scale distribution of a much
weaker field of B \lesssim 10 micro G in this region. Here, we propose that the
Galactic-center magnetic field originates from turbulent activity that is known
to be extreme in the central hundred parsecs. In this picture the spatial
distribution of the magnetic field energy is highly intermittent, and the
regions of strong field have filamentary structures. We propose that the
observed nonthermal radio filaments appear in (or, possibly, may be identified
with) such strongly magnetized regions. At the same time, the large-scale
diffuse magnetic field is weak. Both results of our model can explain the
magnetic field measurements of the the Galactic-center region. In addition, we
discuss the role of ionized outflow from stellar clusters in producing the long
magnetized filaments perpendicular to the Galactic plane.Comment: 11 pages, accepted to ApJ Letter
Shell to shell energy transfer in MHD, Part I: steady state turbulence
We investigate the transfer of energy from large scales to small scales in
fully developed forced three-dimensional MHD-turbulence by analyzing the
results of direct numerical simulations in the absence of an externally imposed
uniform magnetic field. Our results show that the transfer of kinetic energy
from the large scales to kinetic energy at smaller scales, and the transfer of
magnetic energy from the large scales to magnetic energy at smaller scales, are
local, as is also found in the case of neutral fluids, and in a way that is
compatible with Kolmogorov (1941) theory of turbulence. However, the transfer
of energy from the velocity field to the magnetic field is a highly non-local
process in Fourier space. Energy from the velocity field at large scales can be
transfered directly into small scale magnetic fields without the participation
of intermediate scales. Some implications of our results to MHD turbulence
modeling are also discussed.Comment: Submitted to PR
- …