EGU22-12990
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-12990
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

HelioSwarm: The Nature of Turbulence in Space Plasma

Kristopher Klein1, Harlan Spence2, and the The HelioSwarm Science Team*
Kristopher Klein and Harlan Spence and the The HelioSwarm Science Team
  • 1University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ United States of America (kris.klein@gmail.com)
  • 2University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH United States of America
  • *A full list of authors appears at the end of the abstract

Quantifying the nature of turbulent fluctuations and the associated cascade of energy requires simultaneous measurements at multiple points spanning several characteristic length scales. Here, we present the HelioSwarm mission concept, which has been designed to reveal the three-dimensional, dynamic mechanisms controlling the physics of plasma turbulence. The HelioSwarm Observatory measures the plasma and magnetic fields with a novel configuration of spacecraft in the solar wind, magnetosheath, and magnetosphere. These simultaneous multi-point, multi-scale measurements span MHD, transition, and ion-scales, allowing us to address two overarching science goals: 1) Reveal the 3D spatial structure and dynamics of turbulence in a weakly collisional plasma and 2) Ascertain the mutual impact of turbulence near boundaries and large-scale structures. Addressing these goals is achieved using a first-ever "swarm" of nine spacecraft, consisting of a "hub" spacecraft and eight "node" spacecraft. The nine spacecraft co-orbit in a lunar resonant Earth orbit, with a 2-week period and an apogee/perigee of ~60/11 Earth radii. Flight dynamics design and on-board propulsion produce ideal inter-spacecraft separations ranging from fluid scales (1000's of km) to sub-ion kinetic scales (10's of km) in the necessary geometries to enable the application of a variety of established analysis techniques that distinguish between proposed models of turbulence. Each node possesses an identical instrument suite that consists of a Faraday cup, a fluxgate magnetometer, and a search coil magnetometer. The hub has the same instrument suite as the nodes, plus an ion electrostatic analyzer. With these measurements, the HelioSwarm Observatory promises an unprecedented view into the nature of space plasma turbulence.

The HelioSwarm Science Team:

H. Spence, O. Alexandrova, L. Arzamasskiy, M. Argall, D. Caprioli, A. Case, B. Chandran, L.-J. Chen, I. Dors, J. Eastwood, C. Forsyth, A. Galvin, V. Génot, J. Halekas, M. Hesse, T. Horbury, L. Jian, J. Kasper, K. Klein, M. Kunz, B. Lavraud, O. Le Contel, A. Mallet, B. Maruca, W. Matthaeus, C. Owen, A. Retino, C. Reynolds, O. Roberts, A. Schekochihin, R. Skoug, C. Smith, J. Steinberg, M. Stevens, A. Szabo, J. TenBarge, R.Torbert, B. Vasquez, D. Verscharen, P. Whittlesey, G. Zank,and E. Zweibel

How to cite: Klein, K. and Spence, H. and the The HelioSwarm Science Team: HelioSwarm: The Nature of Turbulence in Space Plasma, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-12990, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-12990, 2022.