scholarly journals The Motion of Charged Dust Particles in Interplanetary Space

1980 ◽  
Vol 90 ◽  
pp. 309-310
Author(s):  
G. E. Morfill ◽  
E. Grün

The problem of electromagnetic perturbations of charged dust particle orbits in interplanetary space has been re-examined in the light of our better understanding of the large scale spatial and temporal interplanetary plasma and field topology. In the equatorial plane, the magnetic sectors, caused by the warped current sheet, produce stochastic orbit perturbations. From this a diffusive description of particle motion can be derived, provided the dust particles are sufficiently small. The effects of large unipolar magnetic field regions at high heliographic latitudes will be briefly discussed.

2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 899-919 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. V. Artemyev ◽  
A. I. Neishtadt ◽  
L. M. Zelenyi

Abstract. We investigate dynamics of charged particles in current sheets with the sheared magnetic field. In our previouspaper (Artemyev et al., 2013) we studied the particle motion in such magnetic field configurations on the basis of the quasi-adiabatic theory and conservation of the quasi-adiabatic invariant. In this paper we concentrate on violation of the adiabaticity due to jumps of this invariant and the corresponding effects of stochastization of a particle motion. We compare effects of geometrical and dynamical jumps, which occur due to the presence of the separatrix in the phase plane of charged particle motion. We show that due to the presence of the magnetic field shear, the average value of dynamical jumps is not equal to zero. This effect results in the decrease of the time interval necessary for stochastization of trapped particle motion. We investigate also the effect of the magnetic field shear on transient trajectories, which cross the current sheet boundaries. Presence of the magnetic field shear leads to the asymmetry of reflection and transition of particles in the current sheet. We discuss the possible influence of single-particle effects revealed in this paper on the current sheet structure and dynamics.


2000 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-84
Author(s):  
F. Verheest ◽  
M. Vandas ◽  
B. Buti ◽  
N.F. Cramer ◽  
M. Dryer ◽  
...  

In the last decade the triennial reports from Commission 49 have covered various topics like (nonlinear) plasma processes, magnetohydrodynamic phenomena and flows in the heliosphere, solar wind composition, transient events in, and latitudinal dependencies of, the heliosphere, interstellar gas flow through the interface region, kinetic versus magnetohydrodynamic theory in heliospheric plasmas and charged dust in space plasmas. Continuing the tradition of summarizing specific aspects to give astronomers outside our own specialty a flavour of our field, we now address recent advances in understanding coronal mass ejections in interplanetary space and the inner heliospheric solar wind under quiet and perturbed conditions. We owe a great debt of gratitude to the eminent contributors for their valiant efforts in writing these succinct but clear reports and guiding us through the recent literature.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Henry Lane ◽  
Adrian Grocott ◽  
Nathan Anthony Case ◽  
Maria-Theresia Walach

Abstract. Previous observations have provided a clear indication that the dusk-dawn (v⊥y) sense of both slow (< 200 km s−1) and fast (> 200 km s−1) convective magnetotail flows is strongly governed by the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) By conditions. The related “untwisting hypothesis” of magnetotail dynamics is commonly invoked to explain this dependence, in terms of a large-scale magnetospheric asymmetry. In the current study, we present Cluster spacecraft observations from 12 October 2006 of earthward convective magnetotail plasma flows whose dusk-dawn sense disagrees with the untwisting hypothesis of IMF By control of the magnetotail flows. During this interval, observations of the upstream solar wind conditions from OMNI, and ionospheric convection data using SuperDARN, indicate a large-scale magnetospheric morphology consistent with positive IMF By penetration into the magnetotail. Inspection of the in-situ Cluster magnetic field data reveals a flapping of the magnetotail current sheet; a phenomenon known to influence dusk-dawn flow. Results from the curlometer analysis technique suggest that the dusk-dawn flow perturbations may have been driven by the J x B force associated with a dawnward-propagating flapping of the magnetotail current sheet, locally overriding the expected IMF By control of the flows. We conclude that invocation of the untwisting hypothesis may be inappropriate when interpreting intervals of dynamic magnetotail behaviour such as during current sheet flapping.


2003 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 1691-1707 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. W. H. Cowley ◽  
E. J. Bunce

Abstract. We calculate the latitude profile of the equatorward-directed ionospheric Pedersen currents that are driven in Saturn’s ionosphere by partial corotation of the magnetospheric plasma. The calculation incorporates the flattened figure of the planet, a model of Saturn’s magnetic field derived from spacecraft flyby data, and angular velocity models derived from Voyager plasma data. We also employ an effective height-integrated ionospheric Pedersen conductivity of 1 mho, suggested by a related analysis of Voyager magnetic field data. The Voyager plasma data suggest that on the largest spatial scales, the plasma angular velocity declines from near-rigid corotation with the planet in the inner magnetosphere, to values of about half of rigid corotation at the outer boundary of the region considered. The latter extends to ~ 15–20 Saturn radii (RS) in the equatorial plane, mapping along magnetic field lines to ~ 15° co-latitude in the ionosphere. We find in this case that the ionospheric Pedersen current peaks near the poleward (outer) boundary of this region, and falls toward zero over ~ 5°–10° equator-ward of the boundary as the plasma approaches rigid corotation. The peak current near the poleward boundary, integrated in azimuth, is ~ 6 MA. The field-aligned current required for continuity is directed out of the ionosphere into the magnetosphere essentially throughout the region, with the current density peaking at ~ 10 nA m-2 at ~ 20° co-latitude. We estimate that such current densities are well below the limit requiring field-aligned acceleration of magnetospheric electrons in Saturn’s environment ( ~ 70 nAm-2), so that no significant auroral features associated with this ring of upward current is anticipated. The observed ultraviolet auroras at Saturn are also found to occur significantly closer to the pole (at ~ 10°–15° co-latitude), and show considerable temporal and local time variability, contrary to expectations for corotation-related currents. We thus conclude that Saturn’s ‘main oval’ auroras are not associated with corotation-enforcing currents as they are at Jupiter, but instead are most probably associated with coupling to the solar wind as at Earth. At the same time, the Voyager flow observations also suggest the presence of radially localized ‘dips’ in the plasma angular velocity associated with the moons Dione and Rhea, which are ~ 1–2 RS in radial extent in the equatorial plane. The presence of such small-scale flow features, assumed to be azimuthally extended, results in localized several-MA enhancements in the ionospheric Pedersen current, and narrow bi-polar signatures in the field-aligned currents which peak at values an order of magnitude larger than those associated with the large-scale currents. Narrow auroral rings (or partial rings) ~ 0.25° co-latitude wide with intensities ~ 1 kiloRayleigh may be formed in the regions of upward field-aligned current under favourable circumstances, located at co-latitudes between ~ 17° and ~ 20° in the north, and ~ 19° and ~22° in the south.Key words. Magnetospheric physics (current systems; magnetosphere-ionosphere interactions; planetary magnetospheres)


1979 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith B. Kirkland ◽  
Bengt U. ö. Sonnerup

Self-similar solutions of the magnetogasynamic equations are derived which describe the resistive decay of a plane current sheet in a compressible plasma. Such current sheets are thought to provide the magnetic energy storage in solar flares. They also occur at the boundaries between regions containing different magnetic-field directions in interplanetary space, and at the interface between the solar wing and the earth' magnetic field. It is shown that the resistive decay of a current sheet in a compressible plasma must involve plasma motion. The convective effects associated with this motion are incorporated in the analysis; the inertia effects are not. The electrical and thermal conductivities are taken to be constant, but the analysis may easily be generalized to include realistic temperature and magnetic field dependences of these quantities. Radiative and viscous terms are not included. The ordinary differential equations resulting from the similarity hypothesis are solved numerically, yielding curves of the plasma density, temperature, and velocity, as well as of the magnetic and induced electric fields, as functions of the similarity variable. The non-dimensional groups of importance are: y, the ratio of specific heats at constant pressure and constant volume; Kx, the ratio of thermal to resistive diffusivity; β∞, the ratio of plasma pressure to magnetic pressure at large distances from the current sheet. The first of these ratios is kept constant and equal to 5/3, corresponding to a monoatomic gas. The behaviour of the solution when the other two ratios are varied is investigated. The plasma velocity at large distances from the current sheet does not vanish in these solutions. It is always directed toward the sheet. However, when the diffusivity ratio K∞ is small, plasma flow away from the centre of the sheet also occurs in two narrow regions, one on each side of the centre. As a result of the reversals in the flow direction, the density then displays a relative minimum at the centre of the sheet with two outward travelling maxima adjacent to it. The plasma temperature at the centre of the sheet becomes very large for small K∞ and β∞ The expansion of the sheet becomes explosive and inertia effects can no longer be neglected. The physical meaning of these results is discussed and directions for further research are outlined.


2011 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Ugai

Abstract. As a sequence of Ugai (2010b), the present paper studies in detail the structure and dynamics of large-scale (principal) plasmoid, generated by the fast reconnection evolution in a sheared current sheet with no initial northward field component. The overall plasmoid domain is divided into the plasmoid reconnection region P and the plasmoid core region C. In the region P, the magnetized plasma with reconnected field lines are accumulated, whereas in the region C, the plasma, which was intially embedded in the current sheet and has been ejected away by the reconnection jet, is compressed and accumulated. In the presence of the sheared magnetic field in the east-west direction in the current sheet, the upper and lower parts of the reconnection region P are inversely shifted in the east-west directions. Accordingly, the plasmoid core region C with the accumulated sheared field lines is bent in the north-south direction just ahead of the plasmoid center x=XC, causing the magnetic field component in the north-south direction, whose sign is always opposite to that of the reconnected field lines. Therefore, independently of the sign of the initial sheared field, the magnetic field component Bz in the north-south direction has the definite bipolar profile around XC along the x-axis. At x=XC, the sheared field component has the peak value, and as the sheared fields accumulated in the region C become larger, the bipolar field profile becomes more distinct.


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