266 research outputs found

    The Orientation of the Local Interstellar Magnetic Field

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    The orientation of the local interstellar magnetic field introduces asymmetries in the heliosphere that affect the location of heliospheric radio emissions and the streaming direction of ions from the termination shock of the solar wind. We combine observations of radio emissions and energetic particle streaming with extensive 3D MHD computer simulations of magnetic field draping over the heliopause to show that the plane of the local interstellar field is ~ 60-90 degrees from the galactic plane. This suggests that the field orientation in the Local Interstellar Cloud differs from that of a larger scale interstellar magnetic field thought to parallel the galactic plane

    Modeling of dust halo formation following comet outbursts: Preliminary results

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94600/1/grl3123.pd

    Modeling the Solar Cycle Dependence of Quiet‐Time Ion Upwelling at High Geomagnetic Latitudes

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95121/1/grl4495.pd

    A time‐dependent theoretical model of the polar wind: Preliminary results

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95137/1/grl2867.pd

    Diurnal variations on a plasmaspheric flux tube: Light ion flows and F region temperature enhancements

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95299/1/grl5334.pd

    M-dwarf stellar winds: the effects of realistic magnetic geometry on rotational evolution and planets

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    We perform three-dimensional numerical simulations of stellar winds of early-M dwarf stars. Our simulations incorporate observationally reconstructed large-scale surface magnetic maps, suggesting that the complexity of the magnetic field can play an important role in the angular momentum evolution of the star, possibly explaining the large distribution of periods in field dM stars, as reported in recent works. In spite of the diversity of the magnetic field topologies among the stars in our sample, we find that stellar wind flowing near the (rotational) equatorial plane carries most of the stellar angular momentum, but there is no preferred colatitude contributing to mass loss, as the mass flux is maximum at different colatitudes for different stars. We find that more non-axisymmetric magnetic fields result in more asymmetric mass fluxes and wind total pressures ptotp_{\rm tot} (defined as the sum of thermal, magnetic and ram pressures). Because planetary magnetospheric sizes are set by pressure equilibrium between the planet's magnetic field and ptotp_{\rm tot}, variations of up to a factor of 33 in ptotp_{\rm tot} (as found in the case of a planet orbiting at several stellar radii away from the star) lead to variations in magnetospheric radii of about 20 percent along the planetary orbital path. In analogy to the flux of cosmic rays that impact the Earth, which is inversely modulated with the non-axisymmetric component of the total open solar magnetic flux, we conclude that planets orbiting M dwarf stars like DT~Vir, DS~Leo and GJ~182, which have significant non-axisymmetric field components, should be the more efficiently shielded from galactic cosmic rays, even if the planets lack a protective thick atmosphere/large magnetosphere of their own.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, to appear in MNRA
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