Frontiers in Physics (May 2024)

The effects of plasma density structure on the propagation of magnetosonic waves: 1-D particle-in-cell simulations

  • Tong Shao,
  • Tong Shao,
  • Tong Shao,
  • Xinliang Gao,
  • Xinliang Gao,
  • Xinliang Gao,
  • Yangguang Ke,
  • Yangguang Ke,
  • Yangguang Ke,
  • Quanming Lu,
  • Quanming Lu,
  • Quanming Lu,
  • Xueyi Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2024.1254024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Magnetosonic (MS) waves, i.e., ion Bernstein mode waves, are one of the common plasma waves in the Earth’s magnetosphere, which are important for regulating charged particle dynamics. How MS waves propagate in the magnetosphere is critical to understanding the global distribution of the waves, but it remains unclear. Although previous studies present that MS waves can be reflected by fine-scale density structures, the dissipation of waves by background plasma has long been neglected. In this study, we perform one-dimensional (1-D) particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations to study the propagation of MS waves through density structures, where both absorption and reflection have been included. We find that absorption is as important as reflection when considering the propagation of MS waves through density structures, and both of them are strongly dependent on the shape of density structures. Specifically, the reflectivity of MS waves is positively and negatively correlated with the height and width of density structures, respectively, while the absorptivity of MS waves has a positive correlation with both the height and width of density structures. Our study demonstrates the significance of absorption during the propagation of MS waves, which may help better understand the distribution of MS waves in the Earth’s magnetosphere.

Keywords