scholarly journals Effect of temperature anisotropy on Alfven waves in multi-component magnetospheric plasma

2017 ◽  
Vol 836 ◽  
pp. 012025
Author(s):  
V P Ahirwar ◽  
G Ahirwar
2000 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 311-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. BARONIA ◽  
M. S. TIWARI

Kinetic Alfvén waves in the presence of an inhomogeneous electric field applied perpendicular to the ambient magnetic field in an anisotropic, inhomogeneous magnetoplasma are investigated. The particle aspect approach is adopted to investigate the trajectories of charged particles in the electromagnetic field of a kinetic Alfvén wave. Expressions are found for the field-aligned current, the perpendicular current, the dispersion relation and the particle energies. The growth rate of the wave is obtained by an energy- conservation method. It is predicted that plasma density inhomogeneity is the main source of instability, and an enhancement of the growth rate by electric field inhomogeneity and temperature anisotropy is found. The dispersion relation and growth rate involve the finite-Larmor-radius effect, electron inertia and the temperature anisotropy of the magnetoplasma. The applicability of the investigation to the auroral acceleration region is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
GuanShan Pu ◽  
ChuanBing Wang ◽  
PeiJin Zhang ◽  
Lin Ye

<p>Intrinsic Alfven waves (IAWs) exist pervasively in the solar-terrestrial plasma, which can preferentially heat newborn ions in the direction perpendicular to the ambient magnetic field via non-resonant interactions when the plasma beta is low. The anisotropized newborn ion populations can excite electromagnetic ion-cyclotron (EMIC) instability. Parametric calculations indicate that the lower the plasma beta is, the higher the growth rate, while the growth rate increases with the number density of newborn ions and the intensity of IAWs. The marginal stable surface in three-dimensional parameter space is also calculated, which provides a qualitative description of parametric conditions for instability. We propose that the coupled effects of non-resonant heating by IAWs and EMIC instability could be an effective mechanism for transferring the energy from low-frequency IAWs to EMIC waves with a frequency below the gyrofrequency of the corresponding ion species. Furthermore, the temperature anisotropy of background ions with the same sense has positive effects on the growth of EMIC waves excited by newborn ions.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Tassi ◽  
T. Passot ◽  
P. L. Sulem

A Hamiltonian six-field gyrofluid model is constructed, based on closure relations derived from the so-called ‘quasi-static’ gyrokinetic linear theory where the fields are assumed to propagate with a parallel phase velocity much smaller than the parallel particle thermal velocities. The main properties captured by this model, primarily aimed at exploring fundamental problems of interest for space plasmas such as the solar wind, are its ability to provide a reasonable agreement with kinetic theory for linear low-frequency modes, and at the same time to ensure a Hamiltonian structure in the absence of explicit dissipation. The model accounts for equilibrium temperature anisotropy, ion and electron finite Larmor radius corrections, electron inertia, magnetic fluctuations along the direction of a strong guide field and parallel Landau damping, introduced through a Landau-fluid modelling of the parallel heat transfers for both gyrocentre species. Remarkably, the quasi-static closure leads to exact and simple expressions for the nonlinear terms involving gyroaveraged electromagnetic fields and potentials. One of the consequences is that a rather natural identification of the Hamiltonian structure of the model becomes possible when Landau damping is neglected. A slight variant of the model consists of a four-field Hamiltonian reduction of the original six-field model, which is also used for the subsequent linear analysis. In the latter, the dispersion relations of kinetic Alfvén waves and the firehose instability are shown to be correctly reproduced, relatively far in the sub-ion range (depending on the plasma parameters), while the spectral range where the slow-wave dispersion relation and the field-swelling instabilities are precisely described is less extended. This loss of accuracy originates from the breaking of the condition of small phase velocity, relative to the parallel thermal velocity of the electrons (for kinetic Alfvén waves and firehose instability) or of the ions (in the case of the field-swelling instabilities).


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