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Intermittency at Earth's bow shock: measures of turbulence in quasi-parallel and quasi-perpendicular shocks

Intermittency at Earth's bow shock: measures of turbulence in quasi-parallel and quasi-perpendicular shocks
Intermittency at Earth's bow shock: measures of turbulence in quasi-parallel and quasi-perpendicular shocks

Turbulent plasmas such as the solar wind and magnetosheath exhibit an energy cascade that is present across a broad range of scales, from the stirring scale at which energy is injected, down to the smallest scales where energy is dissipated through processes such as reconnection and wave-particle interactions. Recent observations of Earth's bow shock reveal a disordered or turbulent transition region exhibiting features of turbulent dissipation, like reconnecting current sheets. We used observations from magnetospheric multiscale (MMS) over four separate bow shock crossings of varying shock normal angle to characterize turbulence in the shock transition region and how it evolves toward the magnetosheath. These cases studies have been chosen to ensure validity of Taylor's hypothesis, which we discuss in depth. We observe the magnetic spectrum evolving by fitting power laws over many short intervals, finding that the power-law index in the shock transition region is separable from the upstream and downstream plasma, for both quasi-perpendicular and quasi-parallel shocks. Across the shock, we see a change in the breakpoint location between inertial and ion power-law slopes. We also observe the evolution of scale-independent kurtosis of magnetic fluctuations across the shock, finding a reduction of high kurtosis intervals downstream of the shock. Finally, we adapt a method for calculating correlation length to include a high-pass filter, allowing estimates for changes in correlation length across the shock. In a quasi-perpendicular shock, we find the correlation length to be significantly smaller in the magnetosheath than in solar wind; however, the opposite can occur for quasi-parallel shocks.

1070-664X
Plank, J.
f3b87a76-4828-4a4a-bf38-c234a938eaac
Gingell, I.L.
ba7b8113-3833-40d8-a879-aab3f987455d
Plank, J.
f3b87a76-4828-4a4a-bf38-c234a938eaac
Gingell, I.L.
ba7b8113-3833-40d8-a879-aab3f987455d

Plank, J. and Gingell, I.L. (2023) Intermittency at Earth's bow shock: measures of turbulence in quasi-parallel and quasi-perpendicular shocks. Physics of Plasmas, 30 (8), [082906]. (doi:10.1063/5.0160439).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Turbulent plasmas such as the solar wind and magnetosheath exhibit an energy cascade that is present across a broad range of scales, from the stirring scale at which energy is injected, down to the smallest scales where energy is dissipated through processes such as reconnection and wave-particle interactions. Recent observations of Earth's bow shock reveal a disordered or turbulent transition region exhibiting features of turbulent dissipation, like reconnecting current sheets. We used observations from magnetospheric multiscale (MMS) over four separate bow shock crossings of varying shock normal angle to characterize turbulence in the shock transition region and how it evolves toward the magnetosheath. These cases studies have been chosen to ensure validity of Taylor's hypothesis, which we discuss in depth. We observe the magnetic spectrum evolving by fitting power laws over many short intervals, finding that the power-law index in the shock transition region is separable from the upstream and downstream plasma, for both quasi-perpendicular and quasi-parallel shocks. Across the shock, we see a change in the breakpoint location between inertial and ion power-law slopes. We also observe the evolution of scale-independent kurtosis of magnetic fluctuations across the shock, finding a reduction of high kurtosis intervals downstream of the shock. Finally, we adapt a method for calculating correlation length to include a high-pass filter, allowing estimates for changes in correlation length across the shock. In a quasi-perpendicular shock, we find the correlation length to be significantly smaller in the magnetosheath than in solar wind; however, the opposite can occur for quasi-parallel shocks.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 August 2023
Published date: August 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: J. Plank was supported by STFC studentship ST/V507064/1 (Grant No. 2502298). I.L. Gingell was supported by the Royal Society University Research Fellowship via No. URF\R1\191547.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487419
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487419
ISSN: 1070-664X
PURE UUID: 10e79097-1b6b-4cbb-a60a-e4354456aca7
ORCID for I.L. Gingell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2218-1909

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2024 12:48
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:55

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Author: J. Plank
Author: I.L. Gingell ORCID iD

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