Solar wind temperature anisotropy and its influence on the spectrum of turbulence
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Department of Surface and Plasma Science, Prague, Czechia (offelius@gmail.com)
Nearly collisionless solar wind plasma originating in the solar corona is a turbulent medium. The energy within large scale fluctuations is continuously transferred into smaller scales and it eventually reaches scales at which it is converted into a random particle motion, thus heating the plasma. Although the processes that take place within this complex system have been studied for decades, many questions remain unresolved. The power spectra of the fluctuating fields of the magnetic field, bulk velocity, and ion density were studied extensively; however, the spectrum of the thermal velocity is seldom reported and/or discussed. In this paper, we address the difficulty of estimating its power spectrum. We analyze high-cadence (31 ms) thermal velocity measurements of the BMSW instrument onboard the Spektr-R spacecraft and the SWE instrument onboard the Wind spacecraft. We discuss the role of the proton temperature anisotropy (parallel/perpendicular) and its influence on the shape of the power spectra in the inertial range of turbulence.
How to cite: Pitňa, A., Šafránkova, J., and Němeček, Z.: Solar wind temperature anisotropy and its influence on the spectrum of turbulence, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-2738, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-2738, 2020.