141 research outputs found

    Compressive high-frequency waves riding on an Alfv\'en/ion-cyclotron wave in a multi-fluid plasma

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    In this paper, we study the weakly-compressive high-frequency plasma waves which are superposed on a large-amplitude Alfv\'en wave in a multi-fluid plasma consisting of protons, electrons, and alpha particles. For these waves, the plasma environment is inhomogenous due to the presence of the low-frequency Alfv\'en wave with a large amplitude, a situation that may apply to space plasmas such as the solar corona and solar wind. The dispersion relation of the plasma waves is determined from a linear stability analysis using a new eigenvalue method that is employed to solve the set of differential wave equations which describe the propagation of plasma waves along the direction of the constant component of the Alfv\'en wave magnetic field. This approach also allows one to consider weak compressive effects. In the presence of the background Alfv\'en wave, the dispersion branches obtained differ significantly from the situation of a uniform plasma. Due to compressibility, acoustic waves are excited and couplings between various modes occur, and even an instability of the compressive mode. In a kinetic treatment, these plasma waves would be natural candidates for Landau-resonant wave-particle interactions, and may thus via their damping lead to particle heating.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure

    On nonlinear Alfv\'en-cyclotron waves in multi-species plasma

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    Large-amplitude Alfv\'en waves are ubiquitous in space plasmas and a main component of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence in the heliosphere. As pump waves they are prone to parametric instability by which they can generate cyclotron and acoustic daughter waves. Here we revisit a related process within the framework of the multi-fluid equations for a plasma consisting of many species. The nonlinear coupling of the Alfv\'en wave to acoustic waves is studied, and a set of compressive and coupled wave equations for the transverse magnetic field and longitudinal electric field is derived for waves propagating along the mean-field direction. It turns out that slightly compressive Alfv\'en waves exert, through induced gyro-radius and kinetic-energy modulations, an electromotive force on the particles in association with a longitudinal electric field, which has a potential that is given by the gradient of the transverse kinetic energy of the particles gyrating about the mean field. This in turn drives electric fluctuations (sound and ion-acoustic waves) along the mean magnetic field, which can nonlinearly react back on the transverse magnetic field. Mutually coupled Alfv\'en-cyclotron-acoustic waves are thus excited, a nonlinear process that can drive a cascade of wave energy in the plasma and may generate compressive microturbulence. These driven electric fluctuations might have consequences for the dissipation of MHD turbulence and, thus, for the heating and acceleration of particles in the solar wind.Comment: 19 pages, accepted by Journal of Plasma Physics, in press, Link: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=7908294&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S002237781000054

    PIC Simulations of Velocity-Space Instabilities in a Decreasing Magnetic Field: Viscosity and Thermal Conduction

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    We use particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of a collisionless, electron-ion plasma with a decreasing background magnetic field, BB, to study the effect of velocity-space instabilities on the viscous heating and thermal conduction of the plasma. If BB decreases, the adiabatic invariance of the magnetic moment gives rise to pressure anisotropies with p∣∣,j>p⊥,jp_{||,j} > p_{\perp,j} (p∣∣,jp_{||,j} and p⊥,jp_{\perp,j} represent the pressure of species jj (=i=i or ee) parallel and perpendicular to the magnetic field). Linear theory indicates that, for sufficiently large anisotropies, different velocity-space instabilities can be triggered. These instabilities, which grow on scales comparable to the electron and ion Larmor radii, in principle have the ability to pitch-angle scatter the particles, limiting the growth of the anisotropies. Our PIC simulations focus on the nonlinear, saturated regime of the instabilities. This is done through the permanent decrease of the magnetic field by an imposed shear in the plasma. Our results show that, in the regime 2≲βj≲202 \lesssim \beta_j \lesssim 20 (βj≡8πpj/B2\beta_j \equiv 8\pi p_j/B^2), the saturated ion and electron pressure anisotropies are controlled by the combined effect of the oblique ion firehose (OIF) and the fast magnetosonic/whistler (FM/W) instabilities. These instabilities grow preferentially on the ion Larmor radius scale, and make the ion and electron pressure anisotropies nearly equal: Δpe/p∣∣,e≈Δpi/p∣∣,i\Delta p_e/p_{||,e} \approx \Delta p_i/p_{||,i} (where Δpj=p⊥,j−p∣∣,j\Delta p_j=p_{\perp,j} - p_{||,j}). We also quantify the thermal conduction of the plasma by directly calculating the mean free path of electrons along the mean magnetic field, which we find strongly depends on whether BB decreases or increases. Our results can be applied in studies of low collisionality plasmas such as the solar wind, the intracluster medium, and some accretion disks around black holes.Comment: Published in the Ap

    NHDS: The New Hampshire Dispersion Relation Solver

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    NHDS is the New Hampshire Dispersion Relation Solver. This article describes the numerics of the solver and its capabilities. The code is available for download on https://github.com/danielver02/NHDS.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur

    PIC Simulations of the Effect of Velocity Space Instabilities on Electron Viscosity and Thermal Conduction

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    In low-collisionality plasmas, velocity-space instabilities are a key mechanism providing an effective collisionality for the plasma. We use particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations to study the interplay between electron and ion-scale velocity-space instabilities and their effect on electron pressure anisotropy, viscous heating, and thermal conduction. The adiabatic invariance of the magnetic moment in low-collisionality plasmas leads to pressure anisotropy, p⊥,j>p∣∣,jp_{\perp,j} > p_{||,j}, if the magnetic field B⃗\vec{B} is amplified (p⊥,jp_{\perp,j} and p∣∣,jp_{||,j} denote the pressure of species jj [electron, ion] perpendicular and parallel to B⃗\vec{B}). If the resulting anisotropy is large enough, it can in turn trigger small-scale plasma instabilities. Our PIC simulations explore the nonlinear regime of the mirror, ion-cyclotron, and electron whistler instabilities, through continuous amplification of the magnetic field ∣B⃗∣|\vec{B}| by an imposed shear in the plasma. In the regime 1≲βj≲201 \lesssim \beta_j \lesssim 20 (βj≡8πpj/∣B⃗∣2\beta_j \equiv 8\pi p_j/|\vec{B}|^2), the saturated electron pressure anisotropy, Δpe/p∣∣,e\Delta p_e/p_{||,e}, is determined mainly by the (electron-lengthscale) whistler marginal stability condition, with a modest factor of ∼1.5−2\sim 1.5-2 decrease due to the trapping of electrons by the mirrors. We explicitly calculate the mean free path of the electrons and ions along the mean magnetic field and provide a simple physical prescription for the mean free path and thermal conductivity in low-collisionality βj≳1\beta_j \gtrsim 1 plasmas. Our results imply that velocity-space instabilities likely decrease the thermal conductivity of plasma in the outer parts of massive, hot, galaxy clusters. We also discuss the implications of our results for electron heating and thermal conduction in low-collisionality accretion flows onto black holes, including Sgr A* in the Galactic Center.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure

    The multi-scale nature of the solar wind

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    The solar wind is a magnetized plasma and as such exhibits collective plasma behavior associated with its characteristic spatial and temporal scales. The characteristic length scales include the size of the heliosphere, the collisional mean free paths of all species, their inertial lengths, their gyration radii, and their Debye lengths. The characteristic timescales include the expansion time, the collision times, and the periods associated with gyration, waves, and oscillations. We review the past and present research into the multi-scale nature of the solar wind based on in-situ spacecraft measurements and plasma theory. We emphasize that couplings of processes across scales are important for the global dynamics and thermodynamics of the solar wind. We describe methods to measure in-situ properties of particles and fields. We then discuss the role of expansion effects, non-equilibrium distribution functions, collisions, waves, turbulence, and kinetic microinstabilities for the multi-scale plasma evolution.Comment: 155 pages, 24 figure

    Instabilities Driven by the Drift and Temperature Anisotropy of Alpha Particles in the Solar Wind

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    We investigate the conditions under which parallel-propagating Alfv\'en/ion-cyclotron (A/IC) waves and fast-magnetosonic/whistler (FM/W) waves are driven unstable by the differential flow and temperature anisotropy of alpha particles in the solar wind. We focus on the limit in which w∥α≳0.25vAw_{\parallel \alpha} \gtrsim 0.25 v_{\mathrm A}, where w∥αw_{\parallel \alpha} is the parallel alpha-particle thermal speed and vAv_{\mathrm A} is the Alfv\'en speed. We derive analytic expressions for the instability thresholds of these waves, which show, e.g., how the minimum unstable alpha-particle beam speed depends upon w∥α/vAw_{\parallel \alpha}/v_{\mathrm A}, the degree of alpha-particle temperature anisotropy, and the alpha-to-proton temperature ratio. We validate our analytical results using numerical solutions to the full hot-plasma dispersion relation. Consistent with previous work, we find that temperature anisotropy allows A/IC waves and FM/W waves to become unstable at significantly lower values of the alpha-particle beam speed UαU_\alpha than in the isotropic-temperature case. Likewise, differential flow lowers the minimum temperature anisotropy needed to excite A/IC or FM/W waves relative to the case in which Uα=0U_\alpha =0. We discuss the relevance of our results to alpha particles in the solar wind near 1 AU.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure

    The electron distribution function downstream of the solar-wind termination shock: Where are the hot electrons?

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    In the majority of the literature on plasma shock waves, electrons play the role of "ghost particles," since their contribution to mass and momentum flows is negligible, and they have been treated as only taking care of the electric plasma neutrality. In some more recent papers, however, electrons play a new important role in the shock dynamics and thermodynamics, especially at the solar-wind termination shock. They react on the shock electric field in a very specific way, leading to suprathermal nonequilibrium distributions of the downstream electrons, which can be represented by a kappa distribution function. In this paper, we discuss why this anticipated hot electron population has not been seen by the plasma detectors of the Voyager spacecraft downstream of the solar-wind termination shock. We show that hot nonequilibrium electrons induce a strong negative electric charge-up of any spacecraft cruising through this downstream plasma environment. This charge reduces electron fluxes at the spacecraft detectors to nondetectable intensities. Furthermore, we show that the Debye length λDκ\lambda _{\mathrm D}^{\kappa} grows to values of about λDκ/λD≃106\lambda _{\mathrm D}^{\kappa}/\lambda _{\mathrm D}\simeq 10^{6} compared to the classical value λD\lambda _{\mathrm D} in this hot-electron environment. This unusual condition allows for the propagation of a certain type of electrostatic plasma waves that, at very large wavelengths, allow us to determine the effective temperature of the suprathermal electrons directly by means of the phase velocity of these waves. At moderate wavelengths, the electron-acoustic dispersion relation leads to nonpropagating oscillations with the ion-plasma frequency ωp\omega _{\mathrm p} , instead of the traditional electron plasma frequency.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
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