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  • SPACE SCIENCES  (4)
  • PLASMA PHYSICS  (2)
  • Plasma Physics  (2)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The energy necessary to explain the electron heating in quasi-perpendicular collisionless shocks can be derived either from the electron acceleration in the d.c. cross shock electric potential, or by the interactions between the electrons and the waves existing in the shock. A Monte Carlo simulation has been performed to study the electron distribution function evolution through the shock structure, with and without particle diffusion on waves. This simulation has allowed us to clarify the relative importance of the two possible energy sources; in particular it has been shown that the electron parallel temperature is determined by the d.c. electromagnetic field and not by any wave-particle-induced heating. Wave particle interactions are effective in smoothing out the large gradients in phase space produced by the 'reversible' motion of the electrons, thus producing a 'cooling' of the electrons.
    Keywords: PLASMA PHYSICS
    Type: Nuovo Cimento C, Serie 1 (ISSN 0390-5551); 15 C; 5; p. 607-619.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Preliminary results from the rearward-looking electrostatic analyzer of the plasma science experiment during the Mariner 10 encounter with Venus are described. They show that the solar-wind interaction with the planet probably involves a bow shock rather than an extended exosphere, but that this is not a thin boundary at the point where it was crossed by Mariner 10. An observed reduction in the flux of electrons with energies greater than 100 electron volts is interpreted as evidence for some direct interaction with the exosphere. Unusual intermittent features observed downstream of the planet indicate the presence of a comet-like tail hundreds of scale lengths in length.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: Science; 183; Mar. 29
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: A fully developed bow shock and magnetosheath were observed near Mercury, providing unambiguous evidence for a strong interaction between Mercury and the solar wind. Inside the sheath there is a distinct region analogous to the magnetosphere or magnetotail of earth, populated by electrons with lower density and higher temperature than the electrons observed in the solar wind or magnetosheath. At the time of encounter, conditions were such that a perpendicular shock was observed on the inbound leg and a parallel shock was observed on the outbound leg of the trajectory, and energetic plasma electron events were detected upstream from the outbound shock crossing. The interaction is most likely not atmospheric, but the data clearly indicate that the obstacle to solar wind flow is magnetic, either intrinsic or induced.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: Science; 185; July 12
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Magnetic field and electron plasma observations near dawn magnetopause by triaxial spectrometer and fluxgate magnetometer on satellite OGO 5
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: NSSDC-ID-68-014A-11-PM , NSSDC-ID-68-014A-15-PM , ; 1 (
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Preliminary measurements of electron number density and temperature near Venus and Mercury and some results on flow speeds are presented. It is concluded that the interaction of the solar wind with Venus probably results in a bow shock characterized by H/r = 0.01 (ratio of the ionospheric scale height to the planetocentric distance of the nose of the ionopause); an extended exosphere appears unlikely. This direct interaction is indicated by the behavior of electrons with energies of 100-500 eV. Some unusual downstream effects suggest a comet-like tail several hundred scale lengths long. Near Mercury, a fully developed bow shock and magnetosheath were observed. Inside the magnetosheath there is a region analogous to the magnetosphere of the earth and populated by electrons of lower density and temperature than those found in the solar wind. The solar wind ram pressure corresponds to a stagnation pressure equivalent to a 170 gamma magnetic field. The strong solar wind interaction with Mercury is definitely magnetic, but not ionospheric or atmospheric. Spectra and particle flux varied widely while the spaceship was within the magnetosphere itself; temporal events like substorms may be responsible.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: Plenary Meeting; Jun 17, 1974 - Jul 01, 1974; Sao Paulo; Brazil
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: The equation which governs the quasi-linear approximation to the ensemble and gyro-phase averaged one-body probability distribution function is constructed from first principles. This derived equation is subjected to a thorough investigation in order to calculate the possible limitations of the quasi-linear approximation. It is shown that the reduction of this equation to a standard diffusion equation in the Markovian limit can be accomplished through the application of the adiabatic approximation. A numerical solution of the standard diffusion equation in the Markovian limit is obtained for the narrow parallel beam injection. Comparison of the diabatic and adiabatic results explicitly demonstrates the failure of the Markovian description of the probability distribution function. Through the use of a linear time-scale extension the failure of the adiabatic approximation, which leads to the Markovian limit, is shown to be due to mixing of the relaxation and interaction time scales in the presence of the strong mean field.
    Keywords: PLASMA PHYSICS
    Type: NASA-TM-X-71208 , X-692-76-207
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The boundary layer located in the cusp and adjacent to the magnetopause is a region that is quite turbulent and abundant with waves. The Polar spacecraft's orbit and sophisticated instrumentation are ideal for studying this region of space. Our analysis of the waveform data obtained in this turbulent boundary layer shows broadband magnetic noise extending up to a few kilohertz (but less than the electron cyclotron frequency); sinusoidal bursts (a few tenths of a second) of whistler mode waves at around a few tens of hertz, a few hundreds of hertz, and just below the electron cyclotron frequency; and bipolar pulses, interpreted as electron phase-space holes. In addition, bursts of electron cyclotron harmonic waves are occasionally observed with magnetic components. We show evidence of broadband electrostatic bursts covering a range of approx. 3 to approx. 25 kHz (near but less than the plasma frequency) occurring in packets modulated at the frequency of some of the whistler mode waves. On the basis of high time resolution particle data from the Polar HYDRA instrument, we show that these bursts are consistent with generation by the resistive medium instability. The most likely source of the whistler mode waves is the magnetic reconnection site closest to the spacecraft, since the waves are observed propagating both toward and away from the Earth, are bursty, which is often the case with reconnection, and do not fit on the theoretical cold plasma dispersion relation curve.
    Keywords: Plasma Physics
    Type: Paper-2001JA003012 , Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 106; A9; 19,081-19,099
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We present Polar plasma wave data during cusp energetic particle (CEP) events at 6-9 R(sub E). These data suggest the presence of coherent electrostatic structures that are highly localized and that have typical velocities on the order of hundreds to thousands of kilometers per second along the ambient magnetic field. Some of the wave signatures are solitary waves and some are wave packets. The Polar wave instrument also provides evidence that some of the bursts of electromagnetic waves (with frequencies of a few hundred Hz and just below the electron cyclotron frequency around 800 Hz to 1-2 kHz) that are observed are coher&nt and propagating both up and down the field lines. Electron cyclotron harmonic (ECH) waves are often detected but their duration is usually short (less than 1 second). Low Frequency (less than 1 kHz), broadband, bursty electromagnetic waves are also present. The Polar wave data results are used to obtain a better understanding of the macro/microphysics during a CEP event that takes place on September 11, 1996, by correlating various Polar (approximately 7.0 R(sub E)) and Akebono (approximately 1.4 R(sub E)) data while both spacecraft are in or near the cusp/cleft region and nearly on the same field line, and magnetometer data from the Canadian Intermagnet and Canopus ground stations, which lie near the base of the magnetic footprint passing through Polar. Solar wind and magnetic field data from the interplanetary medium and magnetosheath are provided by the Geotail and IMP-8 satellites, respectively. Some of the cusp waves may be indicators of the reconnection process taking place through the cusp, the result of mixing of magnetosheath with magnetospheric plasma, and the consequence of an anisotropic electron population in a depressed magnetic field. The low frequency electromagnetic waves are still under study to determine their role, if any, in the heating and acceleration of the MeV He ions during CEP events.
    Keywords: Plasma Physics
    Type: Advances in Space Research (ISSN 0273-1177); 24; 1; 23-33
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