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Alfvén-cyclotron w ave mode structure: linear and nonlinear behavior. J. A. Araneda 1 , H. Astudillo 1 , and E. Marsch 2 1 Departamento de Física, Universidad de Concepción, Chile 2 Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany
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Alfvén-cyclotron wave mode structure:linear and nonlinear behavior J. A. Araneda1, H. Astudillo1, and E. Marsch2 1Departamento de Física, Universidad de Concepción, Chile 2Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany Vlasov-Maxwell kinetics: theory, simulations and observations Wolfgang Pauli Institute, Vienna, March 2011
Introduction • The purpose of this talk is to show some “new” aspects of the plasma kinetictheory which may be important inspace plasma physics. • We emphasize the roles of higher-order modes and ofspontaneous electromagnetic fluctuations. • We also consider the role of self-consistent electromagnetic fluctuations, which scatter plasma particles and which may couple to other modes via wave-wave interactions.
Linear kinetic theory: normal and higher-order modes • To begin with, le us to consider the solutions of the linear kinetic dispersion relation for (for simplicity) parallel propagating waves. • We compute all roots of the equation where is the anisotropy, V the drift speed, v the thermal speed, and Z the plasma dispersion function.
Linear Mode Structure Isotropic single proton distribution|| << 1 Increasing damping Higher-order modes Normal modes
Linear Mode Structure Isotropic single proton distribution|| = 0.1 No mode region
Linear Mode Structure Isotropic single proton distribution|| = 0.3 No mode enhanced region
Linear Mode Structure Electron - particles (only) Plasma -particles higher-order modes
Linear Mode Structure e – p - particles plasma (n/ne=0.0001)
Linear Mode Structure e – p - particles plasma (n/ne=0.01)
Linear Mode Structure e – p - particles plasma (n/ne=0.04)
Linear Mode Structure e – p - particles plasma (n/ne=0.047)
Linear Mode Structure e – p - particles plasma (n/ne=0.05)
Spontaneous Fluctuations Theory and Observations • Even in the absence of plasma instabilities, a finite-temperature plasma has small but detectable electromagnetic fluctuations (see Electromagnetic Fluctuations in a Plasma, A. G. Sitenko, 1967; Statistical Plasma Physics, S. Ichimaru). • Quasi-thermal electrostatic emissions in the outer magnetosphere (Shaw and Gurnett, 1975), in the solar wind (Meyer-Vernet et al., 1986) • The spontaneous emission of magnetic field fluctuation is supposed to provide the seed perturbation for the Weibel instability (Yoon, Phys. Plasmas, 2007; Tautz and Schlickeiser Phys. Plasmas, 2007) • Possible role of spontaneous magnetic field fluctuations in the description of the turbulence cascade (Yoon, Phys. Plasmas, 2008)
Spontaneous Fluctuations Theory • We use the fluctuation-dissipation theorem (balance between emission and damping) to calculate the spontaneous spectrum of magnetic (or electric) fluctuations
Spontaneous FluctuationsB2k Isotropic single proton distribution|| = 0.01
Spontaneous Fluctuations Isotropic single proton distribution|| = 0.1
Spontaneous Fluctuations Isotropic single proton distribution|| = 0.3
PIC Simulations Hybrid Method (Particle ions and Fluid electrons) 1D, 2048 cells, 800 particles/cell, L ~ 512 VA/p
Spontaneous Fluctuations (Simulations) Isotropic single proton distribution|| << 1
Spontaneous Fluctuations (Simulations) Isotropic single proton distribution|| = 0.1
Spontaneous Fluctuations (Simulations) Isotropic single proton distribution|| = 0.3
Spontaneous Fluctuations: Heavy Ions Case (He+2, n/ne = 0.05) with i << 1 Araneda et al., Phys. Plasmas (2011)
Spontaneous Fluctuations (Simulations) (He+2, n/ne = 0.05) with i << 1
Transverse Mode Structure, Heavy Ions Case (He+2, n/ne = 0.05, U = 0.1VA) with i << 1
Spontaneous Fluctuations (Simulations) (He+2, n/ne = 0.05, U = 0.1VA) with i << 1
Harmonic Generation • Particle simulations for MHD conditions (βp ~ 0) Analytical Theory Computer Simulations
Power spectra forβp << 1 • The kinetic plasma response differs from fluids even for a small but finite value of proton plasma β Two new types of kinetic instabilities instead Original position of the MHD instability
Driven Ion Acoustic Waves IAW driven by the Decay or Beat instabilities have low phase speeds IAW driven by the Modulational instability have larger phase speeds (slope ~ 0.7 VA)
Driven Ion Acoustic Waves IAW driven by the M instability trap ions localized on the tail of the distribution
Trapping and Induced Pitch-angle Scattering Pitch-angle scattering induced by the growing parallel electric fluctuations Initial distribution too cold, cyclotron resonance may be effective only after heating, and... Proton core gets anisotropically heated Araneda, Marsch, Vinas, PRL 2008
Heavy Ions Case (He+2, n/ne = 0.05) with i << 1 Ion trapping again, but… Selective trapping! Alphas are too heavy
Preferential heating of alpha particles Alphas are not trapped, but the induced pitch-angle scattering produce preferentially heated heavy ion distributions As a result, we observe the anisotropically heated proton core, the beam, and the heated alphas Araneda, Maneva, Marsch, PRL 2009
Preferential acceleration of heavy ions Such processes are effective for low betas plasmas differential motion take place close to the Sun
Preferential acceleration of heavy ions For lower alpha densities, the relative drift speed is even larger n/ne=0.04 n/ne=0.01