Current sheet with medium scale developed turbulence and the formation of the plasma sheet of Earth's magnetosphere and solar prominences

1997 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 1919-1922 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.E. Antonova ◽  
I.L. Ovchinnikov
1988 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 525-537 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerd-Hannes Voigt

The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate how the MHD equilibrium theory can be used to describe the global magnetic field configuration of Earth's magnetosphere and its time evolution under the influence of magnetospheric convection. The MHD equilibrium theory represents magneto-hydrodynamics in the slow-flow approximation. In this approximation time scales are long compared to typical Alfvén wave travel times, and plasma flow velocities are small compared to the Alfvén speed. Under those conditions, the inertial term ρ(dv/dt) in the MHD equation of motion is a small second order term which can be neglected. The MHD equilibrium theory is not a static theory, though, because time derivatives and flow velocities remain first order quantities in the continuity equation, in the thermodynamic equation of state, and in the induction equation. Therefore one can compute slowly time-dependent processes, such as magnetospheric convection, in terms of series of static equilibrium states. However, those series are not arbitrary; they are constrained by thermodynamic conditions according to which the magnetosphere evolves in time.It is an interesting question, whether or not the magnetosphere, driven by slow, lossless, adiabatic, earthward convection of magnetotail flux tubes, can reach a steady state. There exist magnetospheric equilibria in which magnetotail flux tubes satisfy the steady-state condition d/dt (Pρ−γ) = 0. Those configurations exhibit a deep magnetic field minimum in the equatorial plane, near the inner edge of the tail plasma sheet. The magnetosphere becomes tearing-mode unstable in the neighborhood of such a minimum, thus leading to periodic onsets of substorms in the inner plasma sheet. This explains why distinct magnetic field minima have not been observed in this region. Magnetic substorms seem to be an inevitable element of the global convection cycle which inhibit the establishment of an ultimate steady state.MHD equilibria discussed in this paper result from linear and non-linear solutions to the two-dimensional Grad-Shafranov equation for isotropic thermal plasma pressure.


2016 ◽  
Vol 54 (6) ◽  
pp. 423-437 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. I. Domrin ◽  
H. V. Malova ◽  
A. V. Artemyev ◽  
A. P. Kropotkin

Author(s):  
Joseph E. Borovsky ◽  
Jianghuai Liu ◽  
Raluca Ilie ◽  
Michael W. Liemohn

Owing to the spatial overlap of the ion plasma sheet (ring current) with the Earth’s neutral-hydrogen geocorona, there is a significant rate of occurrence of charge-exchange collisions in the dipolar portion of the Earth’s magnetosphere. During a charge-exchange collision between an energetic proton and a low-energy hydrogen atom, a low-energy proton is produced. These “byproduct” cold protons are trapped in the Earth’s magnetic field where they advect via E×B drift. In this report, the number density and behavior of this cold-proton population are assessed. Estimates of the rate of production of byproduct cold protons from charge exchange are in the vicinity of 1.14 cm−3 per day at geosynchronous orbit or about 5 tons per day for the entire dipolar magnetosphere. The production rate of cold protons owing to electron-impact ionization of the geocorona by the electron plasma sheet at geosynchronous orbit is about 12% of the charge-exchange production rate, but the production rate by solar photoionization of the neutral geocorona is comparable or larger than the charge-exchange production rate. The byproduct-ion production rates are smaller than observed early time refilling rates for the outer plasmasphere. Numerical simulations of the production and transport of cold charge-exchange byproduct protons find that they have very low densities on the nightside of geosynchronous orbit, and they can have densities of 0.2–0.3 cm−3 at geosynchronous orbit on the dayside. These dayside byproduct-proton densities might play a role in shortening the early phase of plasmaspheric refilling.


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