435 research outputs found
Ion kinetic energy conservation and magnetic field strength constancy in multi-fluid solar wind Alfv\'enic turbulence
We investigate properties of the plasma fluid motion in the large amplitude
low frequency fluctuations of highly Alfv\'enic fast solar wind. We show that
protons locally conserve total kinetic energy when observed from an effective
frame of reference comoving with the fluctuations. For typical properties of
the fast wind, this frame can be reasonably identified by alpha particles,
which, owing to their drift with respect to protons at about the Alfv\'en speed
along the magnetic field, do not partake in the fluid low frequency
fluctuations. Using their velocity to transform proton velocity into the frame
of Alfv\'enic turbulence, we demonstrate that the resulting plasma motion is
characterized by a constant absolute value of the velocity, zero electric
fields, and aligned velocity and magnetic field vectors as expected for
unidirectional Alfv\'enic fluctuations in equilibrium. We propose that this
constraint, via the correlation between velocity and magnetic field in
Alfv\'enic turbulence, is at the origin of the observed constancy of the
magnetic field: while the constant velocity corresponding to constant energy
can be only observed in the frame of the fluctuations, the correspondingly
constant total magnetic field, invariant for Galilean transformations, remains
the observational signature, in the spacecraft frame, of the constant total
energy in the Alfv\'en turbulence frame.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Nonlinear motion and mechanical mixing in as-grown GaAs nanowires
We report nonlinear behavior in the motion of driven nanowire cantilevers.
The nonlinearity can be described by the Duffing equation and is used to
demonstrate mechanical mixing of two distinct excitation frequencies.
Furthermore, we demonstrate that the nonlinearity can be used to amplify a
signal at a frequency close to the mechanical resonance of the nanowire
oscillator. Up to 26 dB of amplitude gain are demonstrated in this way
Magnetization reversal of an individual exchange biased permalloy nanotube
We investigate the magnetization reversal mechanism in an individual
permalloy (Py) nanotube (NT) using a hybrid magnetometer consisting of a
nanometer-scale SQUID (nanoSQUID) and a cantilever torque sensor. The Py NT is
affixed to the tip of a Si cantilever and positioned in order to optimally
couple its stray flux into a Nb nanoSQUID. We are thus able to measure both the
NT's volume magnetization by dynamic cantilever magnetometry and its stray flux
using the nanoSQUID. We observe a training effect and temperature dependence in
the magnetic hysteresis, suggesting an exchange bias. We find a low blocking
temperature K, indicating the presence of a thin
antiferromagnetic native oxide, as confirmed by X-ray absorption spectroscopy
on similar samples. Furthermore, we measure changes in the shape of the
magnetic hysteresis as a function of temperature and increased training. These
observations show that the presence of a thin exchange-coupled native oxide
modifies the magnetization reversal process at low temperatures. Complementary
information obtained via cantilever and nanoSQUID magnetometry allows us to
conclude that, in the absence of exchange coupling, this reversal process is
nucleated at the NT's ends and propagates along its length as predicted by
theory.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Magnetofluid dynamics of magnetized cosmic plasma: firehose and gyrothermal instabilities
Both global dynamics and turbulence in magnetized weakly collisional cosmic
plasmas are described by general magnetofluid equations that contain pressure
anisotropies and heat fluxes that must be calculated from microscopic plasma
kinetic theory. It is shown that even without a detailed calculation of the
pressure anisotropy or the heat fluxes, one finds the macroscale dynamics to be
generically unstable to microscale Alfvenically polarized fluctuations. Two
instabilities are considered in detail: the parallel firehose instability
(including the finite-Larmor-radius effects that determine the fastest growing
mode) and the gyrothermal instability (GTI). The latter is a new result - it is
shown that a parallel ion heat flux destabilizes Alfvenically polarized
fluctuations even in the absence of the negative pressure anisotropy required
for the firehose. The main conclusion is that both pressure anisotropies and
heat fluxes trigger plasma microinstabilities and, therefore, their values will
likely be set by the nonlinear evolution of these instabilities. Ideas for
understanding this nonlinear evolution are discussed. It is argued that cosmic
plasmas will generically be "three-scale systems," comprising global dynamics,
mesoscale turbulence and microscale plasma fluctuations. The astrophysical
example of cool cores of galaxy clusters is considered and it is noted that
observations point to turbulence in clusters being in a marginal state with
respect to plasma microinstabilities and so it is the plasma microphysics that
is likely to set the heating and conduction properties of the intracluster
medium. In particular, a lower bound on the scale of temperature fluctuations
implied by the GTI is derived.Comment: 10 pages, MNRAS tex style, 1 figur
Imaging the COVID-19: A practical guide
The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) represents the first medical catastrophe of the new millennium. Although imaging is not a screening test for COVID-19, it plays a crucial role in evaluation and follow-up of COVID-19 patients. In this paper, we will review typical and atypical imaging findings of COVID-19
Statistical analysis of orientation, shape, and size of solar wind switchbacks
One of the main discoveries from the first two orbits of Parker Solar Probe (PSP) was the presence of magnetic switchbacks, whose deflections dominated the magnetic field measurements. Determining their shape and size could provide evidence of their origin, which is still unclear. Previous work with a single solar wind stream has indicated that these are long, thin structures although the direction of their major axis could not be determined. We investigate if this long, thin nature extends to other solar wind streams, while determining the direction along which the switchbacks within a stream were aligned. We try to understand how the size and orientation of the switchbacks, along with the flow velocity and spacecraft trajectory, combine to produce the observed structure durations for past and future orbits. We searched for the alignment direction that produced a combination of a spacecraft cutting direction and switchback duration that was most consistent with long, thin structures. The expected form of a long, thin structure was fitted to the results of the best alignment direction, which determined the width and aspect ratio of the switchbacks for that stream. The switchbacks had a mean width of , with an aspect ratio of the order of . We find that switchbacks are not aligned along the background flow direction, but instead aligned along the local Parker spiral, perhaps suggesting that they propagate along the magnetic field. Since the observed switchback duration depends on how the spacecraft cuts through the structure, the duration alone cannot be used to determine the size or influence of an individual event. For future PSP orbits, a larger spacecraft transverse component combined with more radially aligned switchbacks will lead to long duration switchbacks becoming less common
THE THREE-DIMENSIONAL EVOLUTION OF ION-SCALE CURRENT SHEETS: TEARING AND DRIFT-KINK INSTABILITIES IN THE PRESENCE OF PROTON TEMPERATURE ANISOTROPY
We present the first three-dimensional hybrid simulations of the evolution of
ion-scale current sheets, with an investigation of the role of temperature
anisotropy and associated kinetic instabilities on the growth of the tearing
instability and particle heating. We confirm the ability of the ion cyclotron
and firehose instabilities to enhance or suppress reconnection, respectively.
The simulations demonstrate the emergence of persistent three-dimensional
structures, including patchy reconnection sites and the fast growth of a
narrow-band drift-kink instability, which suppresses reconnection for thin
current sheets with weak guide fields. Potential observational signatures of
the three-dimensional evolution of solar wind current sheets are also
discussed. We conclude that kinetic instabilities, arising from non-Maxwellian
ion populations, are significant to the evolution of three-dimensional current
sheets, and two-dimensional studies of heating rates by reconnection may
therefore over-estimate the ability of thin, ion-scale current sheets to heat
the solar wind by reconnection
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