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"Howes, Gregory G"
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Diagnosing collisionless energy transfer using field–particle correlations: gyrokinetic turbulence
by
TenBarge, Jason M.
,
Howes, Gregory G.
,
Klein, Kristopher G.
in
Accretion disks
,
Correlation analysis
,
Electric fields
2017
Determining the physical mechanisms that extract energy from turbulent fluctuations in weakly collisional magnetized plasmas is necessary for a more complete characterization of the behaviour of a variety of space and astrophysical plasmas. Such a determination is complicated by the complex nature of the turbulence as well as observational constraints, chiefly that in situ measurements of such plasmas are typically only available at a single point in space. Recent work has shown that correlations between electric fields and particle velocity distributions constructed from single-point measurements produce a velocity-dependent signature of the collisionless damping mechanism. We extend this work by constructing field–particle correlations using data sets drawn from single points in strongly driven, turbulent, electromagnetic gyrokinetic simulations to demonstrate that this technique can identify the collisionless mechanisms operating in such systems. The velocity-space structure of the correlation between proton distributions and parallel electric fields agrees with expectations of resonant mechanisms transferring energy collisionlessly in turbulent systems. This work motivates the eventual application of field–particle correlations to spacecraft measurements in the solar wind, with the ultimate goal to determine the physical mechanisms that dissipate magnetized plasma turbulence.
Journal Article
Diagnosing collisionless energy transfer using field–particle correlations: Vlasov–Poisson plasmas
by
Howes, Gregory G.
,
Klein, Kristopher G.
,
Li, Tak Chu
in
Astrophysics
,
Electromagnetic fields
,
Energy transfer
2017
Turbulence plays a key role in the conversion of the energy of large-scale fields and flows to plasma heat, impacting the macroscopic evolution of the heliosphere and other astrophysical plasma systems. Although we have long been able to make direct spacecraft measurements of all aspects of the electromagnetic field and plasma fluctuations in near-Earth space, our understanding of the physical mechanisms responsible for the damping of the turbulent fluctuations in heliospheric plasmas remains incomplete. Here we propose an innovative field–particle correlation technique that can be used to measure directly the secular energy transfer from fields to particles associated with collisionless damping of the turbulent fluctuations. Furthermore, this novel procedure yields information about the collisionless energy transfer as a function of particle velocity, providing vital new information that can help to identify the dominant collisionless mechanism governing the damping of the turbulent fluctuations. Kinetic plasma theory is used to devise the appropriate correlation to diagnose Landau damping, and the field–particle correlation technique is thoroughly illustrated using the simplified case of the Landau damping of Langmuir waves in a 1D-1V (one dimension in physical space and one dimension in velocity space) Vlasov–Poisson plasma. Generalizations necessary to apply the field–particle correlation technique to diagnose the collisionless damping of turbulent fluctuations in the solar wind are discussed, highlighting several caveats. This novel field–particle correlation technique is intended to be used as a primary analysis tool for measurements from current, upcoming and proposed spacecraft missions that are focused on the kinetic microphysics of weakly collisional heliospheric plasmas, including the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS), Solar Probe Plus, Solar Orbiter and Turbulence Heating ObserveR (THOR) missions.
Journal Article
Phase-space Energization of Ions in Oblique Shocks
2023
Examining energization of kinetic plasmas in phase space is a growing topic of interest, owing to the wealth of data in phase space compared to traditional bulk energization diagnostics. Via the field-particle correlation (FPC) technique and using multiple means of numerically integrating the plasma kinetic equation, we have studied the energization of ions in phase space within oblique collisionless shocks. The perspective afforded to us with this analysis in phase space allows us to characterize distinct populations of energized ions. In particular, we focus on ions that reflect multiple times off the shock front through shock-drift acceleration, and how to distinguish these different reflected populations in phase space using the FPC technique. We further extend our analysis to simulations of three-dimensional shocks undergoing more complicated dynamics, such as shock ripple, to demonstrate the ability to recover the phase-space signatures of this energization process in a more general system. This work thus extends previous applications of the FPC technique to more realistic collisionless shock environments, providing stronger evidence of the technique’s utility for simulation, laboratory, and spacecraft analysis.
Journal Article
Solar Wind Heating near the Sun: A Radial Evolution Approach
Characterizing the plasma state in the near-Sun environment is essential to constrain the mechanisms that heat and accelerate the solar wind. In this study, we use Parker Solar Probe observations from Encounters 1 through 24 to investigate the radial evolution of solar wind plasma and magnetic field properties in this region. Using intervals with high field-of-view (>85%) coverage, we derive the radial profiles of magnetic field strength (∣B∣), proton density (N), bulk speed (V), total proton temperature (T), parallel (T∥) and perpendicular (T⊥) temperatures, temperature anisotropy (T⊥/T∥), plasma beta (β), Alfvén Mach number (MA), and magnetic field fluctuations (δB/B) for sub and super-Alfvénic regions. In super-Alfvénic regions, power laws of ∣B∣, N, V, and T as a function of the heliocentric distance are broadly consistent with previous Helios results at >0.3 au. The radial evolution of the components of the temperature tensor reveals distinct behavior: T⊥decreases monotonically with distance, whereas T∥ exhibits a nonmonotonic trend—decreasing in the sub-Alfvénic region, increasing just beyond the Alfvén surface. We interpret the increase in T∥ as a proxy for proton beam occurrence. We further examine the evolution of magnetic field fluctuations, finding decreasing radial/parallel fluctuations but enhanced tangential/normal/perpendicular fluctuations in the sunward direction. These fluctuations may provide free energy for beam generation and particle heating via wave–particle interactions.
Journal Article
The fundamental parameters of astrophysical plasma turbulence and its dissipation: non-relativistic limit
2024
A specific set of dimensionless plasma and turbulence parameters is introduced to characterize the nature of turbulence and its dissipation in weakly collisional space and astrophysical plasmas. Key considerations are discussed for the development of predictive models of the turbulent plasma heating that characterize the partitioning of dissipated turbulent energy between the ion and electron species and between the perpendicular and parallel degrees of freedom for each species. Identifying the kinetic physical mechanisms that govern the damping of the turbulent fluctuations is a critical first step in constructing such turbulent heating models. A set of ten general plasma and turbulence parameters are defined, and reasonable approximations along with the exploitation of existing scaling theories for magnetohydrodynamic turbulence are used to reduce this general set of ten parameters to just three parameters in the isotropic temperature case: the ion plasma beta, the ion-to-electron temperature ratio and the isotropic driving wavenumber. A critical step forward in this study is to identify the dependence of all of the proposed kinetic mechanisms for turbulent damping in terms of the same set of fundamental plasma and turbulence parameters. Analytical estimations of the scaling of each damping mechanism on these fundamental parameters are presented. The power of this approach is illustrated in the development of the first phase diagram for the turbulent damping mechanisms as a function of the ion plasma beta and isotropic driving wavenumber for unity ion-to-electron temperature ratio, showing the regions of this two-dimensional parameter space in which ion Landau and transit-time damping, electron Landau and transit-time damping, ion cyclotron damping, ion stochastic heating, collisionless magnetic reconnection and kinetic ‘viscous’ heating play a role in the damping of the turbulent fluctuations.
Journal Article
Compressive Structures in the Foreshock of Collisionless Shocks
by
Raptis, Savvas
,
Karlsson, Tomas
,
Takahashi, Kazue
in
Amplitudes
,
Earth magnetosphere
,
Energetic particles
2026
Collisionless shocks are fundamental accelerators of energetic particles, yet the observations of nonlinear foreshock structures, which are essential in acceleration processes, differ significantly between interplanetary (IP) shocks and planetary bow shocks. We present a direct comparison of two high-Mach-number, quasi-parallel shocks: an IP shock observed by Solar Orbiter and the Earth’s bow shock measured by the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission during the 2024–2025 “string-of-pearls” campaign. We show that foreshock compressive structures (FCSs) initiate upstream of both shocks at similar normalized distances (≲50 ion inertial lengths, di) when the suprathermal (>10 keV) ion density exceeds ∼1% of the background. However, the IP shock lacks the fully evolved, high-amplitude short large-amplitude magnetic structures characteristic of the terrestrial foreshock. We demonstrate that the “growth zone” capable of sustaining these structures is spatially limited (∼135 di), which, due to the high speed of the propagating IP shock, corresponds to a brief observational window of <10 s. Beyond this observational constraint, we suggest an additional physical mechanism that can inhibit foreshock maturity at IP shocks. The lack of global curvature prevents the lateral supply (“cross talk”) of energetic ions from different shock regions. These findings suggest that while the fundamental physics of FCS initiation is unified across collisionless shocks, the achievement of full nonlinearity can be regulated by the unique shock geometry and upstream properties while ultimately remaining observationally challenging to identify.
Journal Article
A field–particle correlation analysis of a perpendicular magnetized collisionless shock
by
Juno, James
,
Wilson, Lynn B.
,
Caprioli, Damiano
in
70 PLASMA PHYSICS AND FUSION TECHNOLOGY
,
Acceleration
,
astrophysical plasmas
2021
Using the field–particle correlation technique, we examine the particle energization in a three-dimensional (one spatial dimension and two velocity dimensions; 1D-2V) continuum Vlasov–Maxwell simulation of a perpendicular magnetized collisionless shock. The combination of the field–particle correlation technique with the high-fidelity representation of the particle distribution function provided by a direct discretization of the Vlasov equation allows us to ascertain the details of the exchange of energy between the electromagnetic fields and the particles in phase space. We identify the velocity-space signatures of shock-drift acceleration of the ions and adiabatic heating of the electrons arising from the perpendicular collisionless shock by constructing a simplified model with the minimum ingredients necessary to produce the observed energization signatures in the self-consistent Vlasov–Maxwell simulation. We are thus able to completely characterize the energy transfer in the perpendicular collisionless shock considered here and provide predictions for the application of the field–particle correlation technique to spacecraft measurements of collisionless shocks.
Journal Article
Collisionless energy transfer in kinetic turbulence: field–particle correlations in Fourier space
by
Howes, Gregory G.
,
TenBarge, Jason M.
,
Liu, Yi-Hsin
in
Correlation
,
Distribution functions
,
Earth magnetosphere
2019
Turbulence is commonly observed in nearly collisionless heliospheric plasmas, including the solar wind and corona and the Earth’s magnetosphere. Understanding the collisionless mechanisms responsible for the energy transfer from the turbulent fluctuations to the particles is a frontier in kinetic turbulence research. Collisionless energy transfer from the turbulence to the particles can take place reversibly, resulting in non-thermal energy in the particle velocity distribution functions (VDFs) before eventual collisional thermalization is realized. Exploiting the information contained in the fluctuations in the VDFs is valuable. Here we apply a recently developed method based on VDFs, the field–particle correlation technique, to a
$\\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}=1$
, solar-wind-like, low-frequency Alfvénic turbulence simulation with well-resolved phase space to identify the field–particle energy transfer in velocity space. The field–particle correlations reveal that the energy transfer, mediated by the parallel electric field, results in significant structuring of the VDF in the direction parallel to the magnetic field. Fourier modes representing the length scales between the ion and electron gyroradii show that energy transfer is resonant in nature, localized in velocity space to the Landau resonances for each Fourier mode. The energy transfer closely follows the Landau resonant velocities with varying perpendicular wavenumber
$k_{\\bot }$
and plasma
$\\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$
. This resonant signature, consistent with Landau damping, is observed in all diagnosed Fourier modes that cover the dissipation range of the simulation.
Journal Article
Diagnosing collisionless energy transfer using field–particle correlations: Alfvén-ion cyclotron turbulence
by
TenBarge, Jason M.
,
Valentini, Francesco
,
Howes, Gregory G.
in
Activation
,
Channels
,
Correlation
2020
We apply field–particle correlations – a technique that tracks the time-averaged velocity-space structure of the energy density transfer rate between electromagnetic fields and plasma particles – to data drawn from a hybrid Vlasov–Maxwell simulation of Alfvén-ion cyclotron turbulence. Energy transfer in this system is expected to include both Landau and cyclotron wave–particle resonances, unlike previous systems to which the field–particle correlation technique has been applied. In this simulation, the energy transfer rate mediated by the parallel electric field $E_{\\Vert }$ comprises approximately 60 % of the total rate, with the remainder mediated by the perpendicular electric field $E_{\\bot }$. The parallel electric field resonantly couples to protons, with the canonical bipolar velocity-space signature of Landau damping identified at many points throughout the simulation. The energy transfer mediated by $E_{\\bot }$ preferentially couples to particles with $v_{tp}\\lesssim v_{\\bot }\\lesssim 3v_{tp}$, where $v_{tp}$ is the proton thermal speed, in agreement with the expected formation of a cyclotron diffusion plateau. Our results demonstrate clearly that the field–particle correlation technique can distinguish distinct channels of energy transfer using single-point measurements, even at points in which multiple channels act simultaneously, and can be used to determine quantitatively the rates of particle energization in each channel.
Journal Article
The velocity-space signature of transit-time damping
by
Huang, Rui
,
Howes, Gregory G.
,
McCubbin, Andrew J.
in
Charged particles
,
Collisional plasmas
,
Electric field strength
2024
Transit-time damping (TTD) is a process in which the magnetic mirror force – induced by the parallel gradient of magnetic field strength – interacts with resonant plasma particles in a time-varying magnetic field, leading to the collisionless damping of electromagnetic waves and the resulting energization of those particles through the perpendicular component of the electric field, $E_\\perp$. In this study, we utilize the recently developed field–particle correlation technique to analyse gyrokinetic simulation data. This method enables the identification of the velocity-space structure of the TTD energy transfer rate between waves and particles during the damping of plasma turbulence. Our analysis reveals a unique bipolar pattern of energy transfer in the velocity-space characteristic of TTD. By identifying this pattern, we provide clear evidence of TTD's significant role in the damping of strong plasma turbulence. Additionally, we compare the TTD signature with that of Landau damping (LD). Although they both produce a bipolar pattern of phase-space energy density loss and gain about the parallel resonant velocity of the Alfvénic waves, they are mediated by different forces and exhibit different behaviours as the perpendicular velocity $v_\\perp \\to 0$. We also explore how the dominant damping mechanism varies with ion plasma beta $\\beta _i$, showing that TTD dominates over LD for $\\beta _i > 1$. This work deepens our understanding of the role of TTD in the damping of weakly collisional plasma turbulence and paves the way to seek the signature of TTD using in situ spacecraft observations of turbulence in space plasmas.
Journal Article