The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Regulation of Solar Wind Electron Temperature Anisotropy by Collisions and Instabilities

  • Peter H. Yoon,
  • Chadi S. Salem,
  • Kristopher G. Klein,
  • Mihailo M. Martinović,
  • Rodrigo A. López,
  • Jungjoon Seough,
  • Muhammad Sarfraz,
  • Marian Lazar,
  • Shaaban M. Shaaban

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad7b09
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 975, no. 1
p. 105

Abstract

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Typical solar wind electrons are modeled as being composed of a dense but less energetic thermal “core” population plus a tenuous but energetic “halo” population with varying degrees of temperature anisotropies for both species. In this paper, we seek a fundamental explanation of how these solar wind core and halo electron temperature anisotropies are regulated by combined effects of collisions and instability excitations. The observed solar wind core/halo electron data in ( β _∥ , T _⊥ / T _∥ ) phase space show that their respective occurrence distributions are confined within an area enclosed by outer boundaries. Here, T _⊥ / T _∥ is the ratio of perpendicular and parallel temperatures and β _∥ is the ratio of parallel thermal energy to background magnetic field energy. While it is known that the boundary on the high- β _∥ side is constrained by the temperature anisotropy-driven plasma instability threshold conditions, the low- β _∥ boundary remains largely unexplained. The present paper provides a baseline explanation for the low- β _∥ boundary based upon the collisional relaxation process. By combining the instability and collisional dynamics it is shown that the observed distribution of the solar wind electrons in the ( β _∥ , T _⊥ / T _∥ ) phase space is adequately explained, both for the “core” and “halo” components.

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