Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
2000 character limit reached

Reflection-driven turbulence in the super-Alfvénic solar wind (2308.10389v1)

Published 20 Aug 2023 in astro-ph.SR, physics.plasm-ph, and physics.space-ph

Abstract: In magnetized, stratified astrophysical environments such as the Sun's corona and solar wind, Alfv\'enic fluctuations ''reflect'' from background gradients, enabling nonlinear interactions and thus dissipation of their energy into heat. This process, termed ''reflection-driven turbulence,'' is thought to play a crucial role in coronal heating and solar-wind acceleration, explaining a range of observational correlations and constraints. Building on previous works focused on the inner heliosphere, here we study the basic physics of reflection-driven turbulence using reduced magnetohydrodynamics in an expanding box -- the simplest model that can capture the local turbulent plasma dynamics in the super-Alfv\'enic solar wind. Although idealized, our high-resolution simulations and simple theory reveal a rich phenomenology that is consistent with a diverse range of observations. Outwards-propagating fluctuations, which initially have high imbalance, decay nonlinearly to heat the plasma, becoming more balanced and magnetically dominated. Despite the high imbalance, the turbulence is strong because Els\"asser collisions are suppressed by reflection, leading to ''anomalous coherence'' between the two Els\"asser fields. This coherence, together with linear effects, causes the turbulence to anomalously grow the ''anastrophy'' (squared magnetic potential) as it decays, forcing the energy to rush to larger scales and forming a ''$1/f$-range'' energy spectrum as it does so. At late times, the expansion overcomes the nonlinear and Alfv\'enic physics, forming isolated, magnetically dominated ''Alfv\'en vortex'' structures that minimize their nonlinear dissipation. These results can plausibly explain the observed radial and wind-speed dependence of turbulence imbalance, residual energy, plasma heating, and fluctuation spectra, as well as making testable predictions for future observations.

Citations (4)

Summary

We haven't generated a summary for this paper yet.

Whiteboard

Paper to Video (Beta)

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.