20 research outputs found
Electrostatic electron cyclotron instabilities near the upper hybrid layer due to electron ring distributions
A theoretical study is presented of the electrostatic electron cyclotron instability involving Bernstein modes in a magnetized plasma. The presence of a tenuous thermal ring distribution in a Maxwellian plasma decreases the frequency of the upper hybrid branch of the electron Bernstein mode until it merges with the nearest lower branch with a resulting instability. The instability occurs when the upper hybrid frequency is somewhat above the third, fourth, and higher electron cyclotron harmonics, and gives rise to a narrow spectrum of waves around the electron cyclotron harmonic nearest to the upper hybrid frequency. For a tenuous cold ring distribution together with a Maxwellian distribution an instability can take place also near the second electron cyclotron harmonic. Noise-free Vlasov simulations are used to assess the theoretical linear growth-rates and frequency spectra, and to study the nonlinear evolution of the instability. The relevance of the results to laboratory and ionospheric heating experiments is discussed
Assessing the role of oxygen on ring current formation and evolution through numerical experiments
We address the effect of ionospheric outflow and magnetospheric ion composition on the physical processes that control the development of the 5 August 2011 magnetic storm. Simulations with the Space Weather Modeling Framework are used to investigate the global dynamics and energization of ions throughout the magnetosphere during storm time, with a focus on the formation and evolution of the ring current. Simulations involving multifluid (with variable H+/O+ ratio in the inner magnetosphere) and singleâfluid (with constant H+/O+ ratio in the inner magnetosphere) MHD for the global magnetosphere with inner boundary conditions set either by specifying a constant ion density or by physicsâbased calculations of the ion fluxes reveal that dynamical changes of the ion composition in the inner magnetosphere alter the total energy density of the magnetosphere, leading to variations in the magnetic field as well as particle drifts throughout the simulated domain. A low oxygen to hydrogen ratio and outflow resulting from a constant ion density boundary produced the most disturbed magnetosphere, leading to a stronger ring current but misses the timing of the storm development. Conversely, including a physicsâbased solution for the ionospheric outflow to the magnetosphere system leads to a reduction in the crossâpolar cap potential (CPCP). The increased presence of oxygen in the inner magnetosphere affects the global magnetospheric structure and dynamics and brings the nightside reconnection point closer to the Earth. The combination of reduced CPCP together with the formation of the reconnection line closer to the Earth yields less adiabatic heating in the magnetotail and reduces the amount of energetic plasma that has access to the inner magnetosphere.Key PointsLow O+/H+ ratio produced stronger ring currentInclusion of physicsâbased ionospheric outflow leads to a reduction in the CPCPOxygen presence is linked to a nightside reconnection point closer to the EarthPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/112251/1/jgra51856.pd
Prospects for Lunar Satellite Detection of Radio Pulses from Ultrahigh Energy Neutrinos Interacting with the Moon
The Moon provides a huge effective detector volume for ultrahigh energy
cosmic neutrinos, which generate coherent radio pulses in the lunar surface
layer due to the Askaryan effect. In light of presently considered lunar
missions, we propose radio measurements from a Moon-orbiting satellite. First
systematic Monte Carlo simulations demonstrate the detectability of Askaryan
pulses from neutrinos with energies above 10^{20} eV, i.e. near and above the
interesting GZK limit, at the very low fluxes predicted in different scenarios.Comment: RevTeX (4 pages, 2 figures). v2 includes updated results and extended
discussio
A Model for Flux Rope Formation and Disconnection in Pseudostreamer Coronal Mass Ejections
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) from pseudostreamers represent a significant fraction of large-scale eruptions from the Sun. In some cases, these CMEs take a narrow jet-like form reminiscent of coronal jets; in others, they have a much broader fan-shaped morphology like CMEs from helmet streamers. We present results from a magnetohydrodynamic simulation of a broad pseudostreamer CME. The early evolution of the eruption is initiated through a combination of breakout interchange reconnection at the overlying null point and ideal instability of the flux rope that forms within the pseudostreamer. This stage is characterized by a rolling motion and deflection of the flux rope toward the breakout current layer. The stretching out of the strapping field forms a flare current sheet below the flux rope; reconnection onset there forms low-lying flare arcade loops and the two-ribbon flare footprint. Once the CME flux rope breaches the rising breakout current layer, interchange reconnection with the external open field disconnects one leg from the Sun. This induces a whip-like rotation of the flux rope, generating the unstructured fan shape characteristic of pseudostreamer CMEs. Interchange reconnection behind the CME releases torsional Alfvén waves and bursty dense outflows into the solar wind. Our results demonstrate that pseudostreamer CMEs follow the same overall magnetic evolution as coronal jets, although they present different morphologies of their ejecta. We conclude that pseudostreamer CMEs should be considered a class of eruptions that are distinct from helmet-streamer CMEs, in agreement with previous observational studies
Selfâconsistent multifluid MHD simulations of Europa's exospheric interaction with Jupiter's magnetosphere
The Jovian moon, Europa, hosts a thin neutral gas atmosphere, which is tightly coupled to Jupiter's magnetosphere. Magnetospheric ions impacting the surface sputter off neutral atoms, which, upon ionization, carry currents that modify the magnetic field around the moon. The magnetic field in the plasma is also affected by Europa's induced magnetic field. In this paper we investigate the environment of Europa using our multifluid MHD model and focus on the effects introduced by both the magnetospheric and the pickup ion populations. The model selfâconsistently derives the electron temperature that governs the electron impact ionization process, which is the major source of ionization in this environment. The resulting magnetic field is compared to measurements performed by the Galileo magnetometer, the bulk properties of the modeled thermal plasma population is compared to the Galileo Plasma Subsystem observations, and the modeled surface precipitation fluxes are compared to Galileo Ultraviolet Spectrometer observations. The model shows good agreement with the measured magnetic field and reproduces the basic features of the plasma interaction observed at the moon for both the E4 and the E26 flybys of the Galileo spacecraft. The simulation also produces perturbations asymmetric about the flow direction that account for observed asymmetries.Key PointsFirst multifluid MHD simulation of Europa's plasma interaction presentedMatches plasma and magnetic field observations during Galileo E4 and E26 flybysPlasma flow and temperatures different for magnetospheric and pick up ionsPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/111914/1/jgra51773.pd
KelvinâHelmholtz instabilities at the magnetic cavity boundary of comet 67P/ChuryumovâGerasimenko
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94670/1/jgra21763.pd
Ion phase space vortices in
The formation and propagation of isolated ion phase space vortices are
observed in a 3-dimensional numerical simulation. The code allows for an
externally applied constant magnetic field. The electrons are assumed to be
isothermal and Boltzmann distributed at all times, implying that Poisson's
equation becomes nonlinear for the present problem. Ion phase space vortices
are formed by the nonlinear saturation of the ion-ion two-stream
instability, excited by injecting an ion beam or short ion-bursts at the
boundary. We consider the effects of finite beam diameters and the
intensity of an externally imposed magnetic field