5,502 research outputs found
Kinetic dissipation and anisotropic heating in a turbulent collisionless plasma
The kinetic evolution of the Orszag-Tang vortex is studied using
collisionless hybrid simulations. In the magnetohydrodynamic regime this vortex
leads rapidly to broadband turbulence. Significant differences from MHD arise
at small scales, where the fluid scale energy dissipates into heat almost
exclusively through the magnetic field because the protons are decoupled from
the magnetic field. Although cyclotron resonance is absent, the protons heat
preferentially in the plane perpendicular to the mean field, as in the corona
and solar wind. Effective transport coefficients are calculated.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to PR
Norovirus Infection and Disease in an Ecuadorian Birth Cohort: Association of Certain Norovirus Genotypes With Host FUT2 Secretor Status.
BACKGROUND: Although norovirus is the most common cause of gastroenteritis, there are few data on the community incidence of infection/disease or the patterns of acquired immunity or innate resistance to norovirus. METHODS: We followed a community-based birth cohort of 194 children in Ecuador with the aim to estimate (1) the incidence of norovirus gastroenteritis from birth to age 3 years, (2) the protective effect of norovirus infection against subsequent infection/disease, and (3) the association of infection and disease with FUT2 secretor status. RESULTS: Over the 3-year period, we detected a mean of 2.26 diarrheal episodes per child (range, 0-12 episodes). Norovirus was detected in 260 samples (18%) but was not found more frequently in diarrheal samples (79 of 438 [18%]), compared with diarrhea-free samples (181 of 1016 [18%]; P = .919). A total of 66% of children had at least 1 norovirus infection during the first 3 years of life, and 40% of children had 2 infections. Previous norovirus infections were not associated with the risk of subsequent infection. All genogroup II, genotype 4 (GII.4) infections were among secretor-positive children (P < .001), but higher rates of non-GII.4 infections were found in secretor-negative children (relative risk, 0.56; P = .029). CONCLUSIONS: GII.4 infections were uniquely detected in secretor-positive children, while non-GII.4 infections were more often found in secretor-negative children
Energy transfer, pressure tensor and heating of kinetic plasma
Kinetic plasma turbulence cascade spans multiple scales ranging from
macroscopic fluid flow to sub-electron scales. Mechanisms that dissipate large
scale energy, terminate the inertial range cascade and convert kinetic energy
into heat are hotly debated. Here we revisit these puzzles using fully kinetic
simulation. By performing scale-dependent spatial filtering on the Vlasov
equation, we extract information at prescribed scales and introduce several
energy transfer functions. This approach allows highly inhomogeneous energy
cascade to be quantified as it proceeds down to kinetic scales. The pressure
work, , can
trigger a channel of the energy conversion between fluid flow and random
motions, which is a collision-free generalization of the viscous dissipation in
collisional fluid. Both the energy transfer and the pressure work are strongly
correlated with velocity gradients.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figure
Observations of Energetic-particle Population Enhancements along Intermittent Structures near the Sun from the Parker Solar Probe
Observations at 1 au have confirmed that enhancements in measured energetic-particle (EP) fluxes are statistically associated with "rough" magnetic fields, i.e., fields with atypically large spatial derivatives or increments, as measured by the Partial Variance of Increments (PVI) method. One way to interpret this observation is as an association of the EPs with trapping or channeling within magnetic flux tubes, possibly near their boundaries. However, it remains unclear whether this association is a transport or local effect; i.e., the particles might have been energized at a distant location, perhaps by shocks or reconnection, or they might experience local energization or re-acceleration. The Parker Solar Probe (PSP), even in its first two orbits, offers a unique opportunity to study this statistical correlation closer to the corona. As a first step, we analyze the separate correlation properties of the EPs measured by the Integrated Science Investigation of the Sun (IS⊙IS) instruments during the first solar encounter. The distribution of time intervals between a specific type of event, i.e., the waiting time, can indicate the nature of the underlying process. We find that the IS⊙IS observations show a power-law distribution of waiting times, indicating a correlated (non-Poisson) distribution. Analysis of low-energy (~15 – 200 keV/nuc) IS⊙IS data suggests that the results are consistent with the 1 au studies, although we find hints of some unexpected behavior. A more complete understanding of these statistical distributions will provide valuable insights into the origin and propagation of solar EPs, a picture that should become clear with future PSP orbits
Transition from ion-coupled to electron-only reconnection: Basic physics and implications for plasma turbulence
Using kinetic particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations, we simulate reconnection
conditions appropriate for the magnetosheath and solar wind, i.e., plasma beta
(ratio of gas pressure to magnetic pressure) greater than 1 and low magnetic
shear (strong guide field). Changing the simulation domain size, we find that
the ion response varies greatly. For reconnecting regions with scales
comparable to the ion Larmor radius, the ions do not respond to the
reconnection dynamics leading to ''electron-only'' reconnection with very large
quasi-steady reconnection rates. The transition to more traditional
''ion-coupled'' reconnection is gradual as the reconnection domain size
increases, with the ions becoming frozen-in in the exhaust when the magnetic
island width in the normal direction reaches many ion inertial lengths. During
this transition, the quasi-steady reconnection rate decreases until the ions
are fully coupled, ultimately reaching an asymptotic value. The scaling of the
ion outflow velocity with exhaust width during this electron-only to
ion-coupled transition is found to be consistent with a theoretical model of a
newly reconnected field line. In order to have a fully frozen-in ion exhaust
with ion flows comparable to the reconnection Alfv\'en speed, an exhaust width
of at least several ion inertial lengths is needed. In turbulent systems with
reconnection occurring between magnetic bubbles associated with fluctuations,
using geometric arguments we estimate that fully ion-coupled reconnection
requires magnetic bubble length scales of at least several tens of ion inertial
lengths
Waveform propagation in black hole spacetimes: evaluating the quality of numerical solutions
We compute the propagation and scattering of linear gravitational waves off a
Schwarzschild black hole using a numerical code which solves a generalization
of the Zerilli equation to a three dimensional cartesian coordinate system.
Since the solution to this problem is well understood it represents a very good
testbed for evaluating our ability to perform three dimensional computations of
gravitational waves in spacetimes in which a black hole event horizon is
present.Comment: 13 pages, RevTeX, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Stable characteristic evolution of generic 3-dimensional single-black-hole spacetimes
We report new results which establish that the accurate 3-dimensional
numerical simulation of generic single-black-hole spacetimes has been achieved
by characteristic evolution with unlimited long term stability. Our results
cover a selection of distorted, moving and spinning single black holes, with
evolution times up to 60,000M.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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