85 research outputs found

    Double layers and plasma-wave resistivity in extragalactic jets: Cavity formation and radio-wave emission

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    For estimated values of the currents carried by extragalactic jets, current-driven electrostatic-wave- and electromagnetic-wave-produced resistivities do not occur. Strong plasma double layers, however, may exist within self-maintained density cavities, the relativistic double-layer-emitted electron, and ion beams driving plasma-wave resistivities in the low- and high-potential plasma adjacent to the double layers. The double-layer-emitted electron beams may also emit polarized radio waves via a collective bremsstrahlung process mediated by electrostatic two-stream instabilities

    Physical improvements to the solar wind reconnection control function for the Earth's magnetosphere

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98826/1/jgra50110.pd

    Looking for evidence of mixing in the solar wind from 0.31 to 0.98 AU

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95482/1/jgra21890.pd

    The solar wind electric field does not control the dayside reconnection rate

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    Working toward a physical understanding of how solar wind/magnetosphere coupling works, four arguments are presented indicating that the solar wind electric field v sw × B sw does not control the rate of reconnection between the solar wind and the magnetosphere. Those four arguments are (1) that the derived rate of dayside reconnection is not equal to solar wind electric field, (2) that electric field driver functions can be improved by a simple modification that disallows their interpretation as the solar wind electric field, (3) that the electric field in the magnetosheath is not equal to the electric field in the solar wind, and (4) that the magnetosphere can mass load and reduce the dayside reconnection rate without regard for the solar wind electric field. The data are more consistent with a coupling function based on local control of the reconnection rate than the Axford conjecture that reconnection is controlled by boundary conditions irrespective of local parameters. Physical arguments that the solar wind electric field controls dayside reconnection are absent; it is speculated that it is a coincidence that the electric field does so well at correlations with geomagnetic indices. Key Points The solar wind electric field does not control the dayside reconnection rate Rather, the reconnection rate and the sheath flow control the electric fields A modification improves electric field drivers but ruins their interpretationPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/106730/1/jgra50810.pd

    Exploring the cross correlations and autocorrelations of the ULF indices and incorporating the ULF indices into the systems science of the solar wind‐driven magnetosphere

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    The ULF magnetospheric indices S gr , S geo , T gr , and T geo are examined and correlated with solar wind variables, geomagnetic indices, and the multispacecraft‐averaged relativistic‐electron flux F in the magnetosphere. The ULF indices are detrended by subtracting off sine waves with 24 h periods to form S grd , S geod , T grd , and T geod . The detrending improves correlations. Autocorrelation‐function analysis indicates that there are still strong 24 h period nonsinusoidal signals in the indices which should be removed in future. Indications are that the ground‐based indices S grd and T grd are more predictable than the geosynchronous indices S geod and T geod . In the analysis, a difference index ∆ S mag  ≈  S grd − 0.693 S geod is derived: the time integral of ∆ S mag has the highest ULF index correlation with the relativistic‐electron flux F . In systems‐science fashion, canonical correlation analysis (CCA) is used to correlate the relativistic‐electron flux simultaneously with the time integrals of (a) the solar wind velocity, (b) the solar wind number density, (c) the level of geomagnetic activity, (d) the ULF indices, and (e) the type of solar wind plasma (coronal hole versus streamer belt): The time integrals of the solar wind density and the type of plasma have the highest correlations with F . To create a solar wind‐Earth system of variables, the two indices S grd and S geod are combined with seven geomagnetic indices; from this, CCA produces a canonical Earth variable that is matched with a canonical solar wind variable. Very high correlations ( r corr  = 0.926) between the two canonical variables are obtained. Key Points ULF indices contain nonsinusoidal periodic signals in universal time ULF indices are not the strongest correlator with radiation belt electron fluxes ULF indices were integrated into a mathematical system science of magnetospherePeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108067/1/jgra51050.pd

    Compressional perturbations of the dayside magnetosphere during high‐speed‐stream‐driven geomagnetic storms

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    The quasi‐DC compressions of the Earth’s dayside magnetic field by ram‐pressure fluctuations in the solar wind are characterized by using multiple GOES spacecraft in geosynchronous orbit, multiple Los Alamos spacecraft in geosynchronous orbit, global MHD simulations, and ACE and Wind solar wind measurements. Owing to the inward‐outward advection of plasma as the dayside magnetic field is compressed, magnetic field compressions experienced by the plasma in the dayside magnetosphere are greater than the magnetic field compressions measured by a spacecraft. Theoretical calculations indicate that the plasma compression can be a factor of 2 higher than the observed magnetic field compression. The solar wind ram‐pressure changes causing the quasi‐DC magnetospheric compressions are mostly owed to rapid changes in the solar wind number density associated with the crossing of plasma boundaries; an Earth crossing of a plasma boundary produces a sudden change in the dayside magnetic field strength accompanied by a sudden inward or outward motion of the plasma in the dayside magnetosphere. Superposed epoch analysis of high‐speed‐stream‐driven storms was used to explore solar wind compressions and storm time geosynchronous magnetic field compressions, which are of particular interest for the possible contribution to the energization of the outer electron radiation belt. The occurrence distributions of dayside magnetic field compressions, solar wind ram‐pressure changes, and dayside radial plasma flow velocities were investigated: all three quantities approximately obey power law statistics for large values. The approximate power law indices for the distributions of magnetic compressions and ram‐pressure changes were both −3.Key PointsQuasi‐DC compressions of the dayside magnetosphere are responses to solar wind ram‐pressure changesThe plasma compression in the dayside is greater than the field compression measured by a satelliteField compressions, ram‐pressure changes, and flow velocities obey large‐value power law statisticsPeer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146460/1/jgra52633.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146460/2/jgra52633_am.pd

    Exploring the effect of current sheet thickness on the high‐frequency Fourier spectrum breakpoint of the solar wind

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    The magnetic power spectrum of the solar wind at 1 AU exhibits a breakpoint at a frequency of about 0.1–1 Hz, with the spectrum being steeper above the breakpoint than below the breakpoint. Because magnetic discontinuities contain much of the Fourier power in the solar wind, it is suspected that current sheet thicknesses (i.e., discontinuity thicknesses) may play a role in determining the frequency of this breakpoint. Using time series measurements of the solar wind magnetic field from the Wind spacecraft, the effect of current sheet thicknesses on the breakpoint is investigated by time stretching the solar wind time series at the locations of current sheets, effectively thickening the current sheets in the time series. This localized time stretching significantly affects the magnetic power spectral density of the solar wind in the vicinity of the high‐frequency breakpoint: a substantial fraction of the Fourier power at the breakpoint frequency is contained in current sheets that occupy a small fraction of the spatial volume of the solar wind. It is concluded that current sheet thickness appears to play a role in determining the frequency fB of the high‐frequency breakpoint of the magnetic power spectrum of the solar wind. This analysis of solar wind data is aided by comparisons with power spectra generated from artificial time series.Key PointsCurrent‐sheet thicknesses affect the high‐frequency breakpoint frequency of the solar windSolar‐wind current sheets contain substantial magnetic Fourier powerThere are outstanding questions about the solar‐wind current sheet origins and physicsPeer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144299/1/jgra52192_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144299/2/jgra52192.pd

    A system science methodology develops a new composite highly predictable index of magnetospheric activity for the community: the whole-Earth index E(1)

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    For community use, a new composite whole-Earth index E(1) and its matching composite solar wind driving function S(1) are derived. A system science methodology is used based on a time-dependent magnetospheric state vector and a solar wind state vector, with canonical correlation analysis (CCA) used to reduce the two state vectors to the two time-dependent scalars E(1)(t) and S(1)(t). The whole-Earth index E(1) is based on a diversity of measures via six diverse geomagnetic indices that will be readily available in the future: SML, SMU, Ap60, SYMH, ASYM, and PCC. The CCA-derived composite index has several advantages: 1) the new “canonical” geomagnetic index E(1) will provide a more powerful description of magnetospheric activity, a description of the collective behavior of the magnetosphere–ionosphere system. 2) The new index E(1) is much more accurately predictable from upstream solar wind measurements on Earth. 3) Indications are that the new canonical geomagnetic index E(1) will be accurately predictable even when as-yet-unseen extreme solar wind conditions occur. The composite solar wind driver S(1) can also be used as a universal driver function for individual geomagnetic indices or for magnetospheric particle populations. To familiarize the use of the new index E(1), its behavior is examined in different phases of the solar cycle, in different types of solar wind plasma, during high-speed stream-driven storms, during CME sheath-driven storms, and during superstorms. It is suggested that the definition of storms are the times when E(1) >1

    Further investigation of the effect of upstream solar-wind fluctuations on solar-wind/magnetosphere coupling: Is the effect real?

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    There is a general consensus that fluctuations in the solar wind magnetic field and/or the Alfvenicity of the solar wind drive a solar wind-magnetosphere interaction. 11 years of hourly-averaged solar wind and magnetospheric geomagnetic indices are used to further examine this hypothesis in detail, confirming that geomagnetic activity statistically increases with the amplitude of upstream fluctuations and with the Alfvénicity, even when solar-wind reconnection driver functions are weak and reconnection on the dayside magnetopause should vanish. A comparison finds that the fluctuation-amplitude effect appears to be stronger than the Alfvénicity effect. In contradiction to the generally accepted hypothesis of driving an interaction, it is also demonstrated that many solar wind parameters are correlated with the fluctuation amplitude and the Alfvénicity. As a result, we caution against immediately concluding that the latter two parameters physically drive the overall solar-wind/magnetosphere interaction: the fluctuation amplitude and Alfvénicity could be acting as proxies for other more-relevant variables. More decisive studies are needed, perhaps focusing on the roles of ubiquitous solar-wind strong current sheets and velocity shears, which drive the measured amplitudes and Alfvénicities of the upstream solar-wind fluctuations
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