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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The rate of occurrence of interplanetary discontinuities (ROID) is examined using Ulysses magnetic field and plasma data from 1 to 5 AU radial distance from the Sun and at high heliographic latitudes. We find two regions where the ROID is high: in stream-stream interaction regions and in Alfven wave trains. This latter feature is particularly obvious at high latitudes when Ulysses enters a high speed stream associated with a polar coronal hole. These streams are characterized by the presence of continuous, large-amplitude (Delta (vector 13)/absolute value of B is about 1-2 Alfven waves and an extraordinarily high ROID value (approximately 150 discontinuities/day). In a number of intervals examined, it is found that (rotational) discontinuities are an integral part of the Alfven waves. The nonlinear Alfven waves are spherically polarized, i.e., the tip of the perturbation vector resides on the surface of a sphere (a consequence of constant absolute value of B). The slowly rotating part of the wave rotates approximately 270 deg in phase. There is a slight arc in the B(sub 1) - B(sub 2) hodogram, suggesting an almost linear polarization. The phase rotation associated with the discontinuity is about 90 deg, lies in the same plane as the slowly rotaing part of the Alfven wave, and therefore completes the 360 deg phase rotation. The best description of the overall Alfven wave plus discontinuity is a spherical, arc-polarized, phase-steepened wave.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Geophysical Research Letters (ISSN 0094-8276); 21; 21; p. 2267-2270
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Observations of the IMF carried out from October 1990 to February 1992 during the in-ecliptic phase of the Ulysses mission are presented. The observations were made between 1 and 5.4 AU during a different phase of the solar cycle from previous missions. The large-scale reorganization of the solar coronal fields following the maximum in Solar Cycle 22 generated numerous transient events, causing large-scale disturbances in interplanetary space, particularly during the first half of 1991. From about the middle of 1991, solar activity apparently decreased, resulting in fewer transient events, allowing the formation of corotating interaction regions (CIRs) recurring in successive solar rotations. Observations of the IMF reflect this temporal evolution in solar activity. However, the average orientation of the IMF, the observed sector structure, and the evolution of the CIRs show that the dynamic interaction of transient events with evolving stream-stream structures in this heliocentric distance range results in significant deviations from the expected IMF topology, even when signature of the transients is less apparent.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Advances in Space Research (ISSN 0273-1177); 13; 6; p. 15-24.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We report on observations of the Earth's bow shock at unprecedentedly large downtail distances, some as remote as 360 R(sub E). Suprisingly, we find that even at these large distances, the bow shock signature remains clear. The cases we report are among the weakest shocks ever clearly identified. These shocks reveal patterns of field changes remarkably similar to those observed for stronger shocks. Indeed, several of the shocks could serve as textbook examples because they occur in unusually quiet and steady solar wind conditions. The quasi- perpendicular shocks are, in some cases preceded by whistler wave trains. Several of the shocks which have normal vectors in the transitional region between quasiperpendicular and quasiparallel are associated with large amplitude wave disturbances in the downstream plasma. Although low Mach number, these shocks are the source of large amplitude turbulence. We show a range of fits to the locations of the shock crossings, and argue that, for steady solar wind conditions, there is no sign of tail flapping. The displacement of the shock from the tail axis appears to be governed by the interplanetary magnetic field orientation as previously reported for Venus.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Advances in Space Research (ISSN 0273-1177); 16; 4; p. (4)197-(4)204
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: As the Galileo spacecraft passed the asteroids Gaspra in 1990 and Ida in 1993, the magnetometer recorded changes in the solar wind magnetic field that we associate with the presence of the nearby body. This paper focuses on the types of interactions that can produce perturbations in the solar wind. We have suggested that the interaction at Gaspra is consistent with expectations of flow diversion by a magnetic dipole moment and an associated 'magnetosphere' whose scale size is much larger than the diameter of the solid body. The conditions for the Ida flyby leave more room for ambiguity. The observations could plausibly be related to either interaction with a magnetized body or with a conducting body. We will report on details of the observations that may enable us to distinguish between the different types of interaction and to provide quantitative estimates of the physical properties of the asteroids themselves.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Advances in Space Research (ISSN 0273-1177); 16; 4; p. (4)59-(4)68
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Data from Galileo's two asteroid flybys reveal magnetic fluctuations that we interpret as perturbations of the solar wind magnetic field caused by an interaction with the nearby asteroid. The scale sizes of the bodies (approximately 14 km for Gaspra and approximately 30 km for Ida) are intermediate between the ion and electron gyroradii, which implies that the asteroid-imposed perturbations propagate in the whistler mode. Special properties of the whistler mode include phase phase velocities that can exceed the solar wind speed and confinement of the disturbance to directions nearly aligned with the magnetic field. These features of the interaction impose a structure on the solar wind disturbance that differs greatly from the forms familiar for either magnetized or unmagnetized bodies of magnetohydrodynamic spatial scales. We examine both data and computer simulations of the interaction with special attention to what can be inferred about the interaction itself from analysis of the data.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Advances in Space Research (ISSN 0273-1177); 16; 4; p. (4)47-(4)57
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