scholarly journals AN ESTIMATE OF THE NEARBY INTERSTELLAR MAGNETIC FIELD USING NEUTRAL ATOMS

2011 ◽  
Vol 738 (1) ◽  
pp. 29 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Heerikhuisen ◽  
N. V. Pogorelov
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Iannis Dandouras ◽  
Philippe Garnier ◽  
Donald G Mitchell ◽  
Edmond C Roelof ◽  
Pontus C Brandt ◽  
...  

Titan's nitrogen-rich atmosphere is directly bombarded by energetic ions, due to its lack of a significant intrinsic magnetic field. Singly charged energetic ions from Saturn's magnetosphere undergo charge-exchange collisions with neutral atoms in Titan's upper atmosphere, or exosphere, being transformed into energetic neutral atoms (ENAs). The ion and neutral camera, one of the three sensors that comprise the magnetosphere imaging instrument (MIMI) on the Cassini/Huygens mission to Saturn and Titan, images these ENAs like photons, and measures their fluxes and energies. These remote-sensing measurements, combined with the in situ measurements performed in the upper thermosphere and in the exosphere by the ion and neutral mass spectrometer instrument, provide a powerful diagnostic of Titan's exosphere and its interaction with the Kronian magnetosphere. These observations are analysed and some of the exospheric features they reveal are modelled.


2016 ◽  
Vol 380 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 789-793
Author(s):  
Zi-Fa Yu ◽  
Fang-Qi Hu ◽  
Ai-Xia Zhang ◽  
Ju-Kui Xue
Keyword(s):  

1957 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 515 ◽  
Author(s):  
JH Piddington

A new absorption mechanism is discussed in relation to the turbulence of the interstellar gas in the presence of a magnetic field. It is evaluated and compared with ordinary viscous absorption in different types of interstellar gas. Wherever there is a proportion, even though very small, of neutral atoms (helium being most likely) the new mechanism predominates for waves of length comparable with one parsec or more.


1977 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Bighel ◽  
A. R. Collins ◽  
N. F. Cramer

The structure of MHD switch-on shocks propagating along a magnetic field into an upstream partially ionized plasma is studied experimentally and theoretically. Detailed measurements of density, temperature and magnetic field are presented, and compared with a model based on the fluid equations for electrons, ions and neutral atoms. The main feature of the model is that dissipation of shock energy occurs primarily through ion collisions with neutrals. According to the model, at low upstreain ionization levels, ions and neutrals are preferentially heated above the electrons. At high ionization levels, the electrons are more strongly heated. This is found to be in agreement with the shock structures obtained for 4 switch-on shocks, differing in the level of upstream ionization.


1978 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 171 ◽  
Author(s):  
CD Mathers ◽  
NF Cramer

The generalized Ohm's law for a partially ionized magnetized plasma composed of ions, electrons and neutral atoms is calculated. The plasma is modelled by a three-fluid treatment, with elastic collisions between all three species, as well as inelastic ionization and recombination collisions being taken into account. Ionization is assumed to be due to electron-atom impacts, and recombination is assumed to be due to three-body electron-electron-atom collisions. The resistivity is calculated, and it is shown that the major effect of ionization and recombination is to reduce the resistivity for currents perpendicular to the magnetic field under typical laboratory conditions. However, this resistivity is still greater than Coulomb resistivity, owing to plasma-neutral gas friction.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maciej Bzowski ◽  
Marzena Kubiak ◽  
Jacob Heerikhuisen

<p>Interaction between the solar wind and the local interstellar environment has been studied using several observation techniques, including in-situ sampling of the plasma, magnetic field,  energetic ions by the Voyager spacecraft; remote-sensing observations of energetic neutral atoms (IBEX, Cassini); and the primary and secondary populations of interstellar neutral gas (IBEX-Lo). Understanding the processes at the heliospheric boundary and of the conditions outside the heliosphere is typically  done by fitting parameters used in models of this interaction to various observables, including the Voyager crossing distances of the termination shock and the heliopause, the size of the IBEX ribbon and its center directions, the sky distribution of the Lyman-alpha helioglow, and the flux of interstellar gas at 1 au from direct-sampling observations. Typically, it is expected that all or most of these observables are successfully reproduced. Even though the interaction of interstellar neutral gas with the solar wind and solar EUV output is sometimes taken into account, the global heliosphere is usually simulated as a stationary structure, with the solar wind flux, density, and magnetic field variation ignored. However, solar wind is a dynamic phenomenon, which results in variations in the plasma flow both inside and outside the heliopause and in variations of the distance to the heliopause. Based on in-situ solar wind observations, dynamic pressure of the solar wind may change by a factor of 2, which may result in a heliopause distance change by 50%, counting from the lowest-pressure conditions.</p><p>Interstellar neutral atoms reaching detectors at 1 au or contributing to the helioglow observed from 1 au need very different times to travel from the interaction  region , typically located at ~1.75 of the heliopause distance to 1 au. While the primary ISN atoms take 3—4 solar cycles to travel from this region to 1 au, with a physical time spread (not an uncertainty!) of about one solar cycle, the atoms from secondary population take as much as 15 solar cycles, with a large spread of 7 solar cycles. This implies that ISN He atoms sampled by IBEX-Lo, as well as those observed as the helioglow, originate from two different and disparate epochs. While it may be expected that the interstellar conditions at a time scale of 200 years are little variable, solar wind is definitely varying, with secular changes superimposed on the solar cycle variation.</p><p>Direct-sampling observations provide information on the plasma flow in the OHS inside ~60° around the inflow direction, with well-defined regions of the OHS contributing atoms to individual pixels observed by IBEX and IMAP at different orbits. However, the information obtained is heavily averaged over time, and the epoch  imprinted on these population is very different to the epochs characteristic for in-situ observations from the Voyagers (by 50 to 170 years!)  and remote-sensing observations of the much faster-running energetic neutral atoms.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 499 (1) ◽  
pp. 441-454
Author(s):  
I I Baliukin ◽  
V V Izmodenov ◽  
D B Alexashov

ABSTRACT The interstellar boundary explorer (IBEX) has been measuring fluxes of the energetic neutral atoms (ENAs) using the IBEX-Hi (0.3–6 keV) instrument since 2008. We have developed a numerical time-depended code to calculate globally distributed flux (GDF) of hydrogen ENAs employing both (1) 3D kinetic-MHD model of the global heliosphere and (2) reconstruction of atom trajectories from 1 au, where they are observed by IBEX, to the point of their origin in the inner heliosheath (IHS). The key factor in the simulation is a detailed kinetic consideration of the pickup ions (PUIs), the supra-thermal component of protons in the heliosphere, which is ‘parental’ to the ENAs and originates in the region of the supersonic solar wind being picked by the heliospheric magnetic field. As a result of our study, we have concluded that (1) the developed model is able to reproduce the geometry of the multilobe structure seen in the IBEX-Hi GDF maps, (2) the GDF is extremely sensitive to the form of the velocity distribution function of PUIs in the IHS, and the accounting for the existence of an additional energetic population of PUIs is essential to explain the data, (3) despite a relatively good agreement, there are some quantitative differences between the model calculations and IBEX-Hi data. Possible reasons for these differences are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 010307
Author(s):  
Ai-Xia Zhang ◽  
Ying Zhang ◽  
Yan-Fang Jiang ◽  
Zi-Fa Yu ◽  
Li-Xia Cai ◽  
...  

1970 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. 51-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
George B. Field

As excellent reviews have appeared recently (Spitzer, 1968a; Pikel'ner, 1968a) we shall consider here only some special topics where progress is being made – thermal properties of Hi and Hii clouds, and shock waves. The components of the medium which are dynamically important are neutral atoms, charged ions and electrons, grains, cosmic rays, magnetic field, and light. In Table I we indicate the degree of momentum coupling among these components. The main mass of the medium, in ions and atoms, is well coupled through collisions, with a mean free path λ ≈ 10−3 pc, and may usually be treated hydrodynamically. Parker (1965) has shown that for many purposes the cosmic-rays can be considered as a separate gas, strongly coupled to the magnetic field. The coupling of the atom-ion gas to the magnetic field is through the magnetic forces on the ions, which transmit the forces to the neutral atoms by collisions unless the differential stresses on the two components are unusually large. Grains are not coupled strongly to any other component, as their stopping distances are of the order of parsecs and their gyro-periods of the order of 104 yr. The coupling of grains to radiation pressure can lead to interesting differential effects. Light is important in carrying away thermal energy but does not critically affect the momentum balance of the gas. A possible exception is the Ly-α radiation field discovered by Kurt and Sunyaev (1967) which has a pressure of 10−13 dyne cm−2. If this phenomenon is common in interstellar space, it could have effects.


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