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Direct observation of ion cyclotron damping of turbulence in Earth's magnetosheath plasma

Space Sciences

Direct observation of ion cyclotron damping of turbulence in Earth's magnetosheath plasma

A. S. Afshari, G. G. Howes, et al.

This groundbreaking research by A. S. Afshari and colleagues from the University of Iowa and other esteemed institutions directly observes ion cyclotron damping of turbulence in Earth's magnetosheath plasma, utilizing spacecraft measurements from the MMS mission. The team uncovers the dominant channels of turbulent dissipation and energy partitioning between ions and electrons.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Plasma turbulence plays a key role in space and astrophysical plasma systems, enabling the energy of magnetic fields and plasma flows to be transported to particle kinetic scales at which the turbulence dissipates and heats the plasma. Identifying the physical mechanisms responsible for the dissipation of the turbulent energy is a critical step in developing the predictive capability for the turbulent heating needed by global models. In this work, spacecraft measurements of the electromagnetic fields and ion velocity distributions by the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission are used to generate velocity-space signatures that identify ion cyclotron damping in Earth's turbulent magnetosheath, in agreement with analytical modeling. Furthermore, the rate of ion energization is directly quantified and combined with a previous analysis of the electron energization to identify the dominant channels of turbulent dissipation and determine the partitioning of energy among species in this interval.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 07, 2024
Authors
A. S. Afshari, G. G. Howes, J. R. Shuster, K. G. Klein, D. McGinnis, M. M. Martinović, S. A. Boardsen, C. R. Brown, R. Huang, D. P. Hartley, C. A. Kletzing
Tags
ion cyclotron damping
turbulence
magnetosheath plasma
spacecraft measurements
turbulent dissipation
energy partitioning
MMS mission
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