766 research outputs found
Coupling between whistler waves and slow-mode solitary waves
The interplay between electron-scale and ion-scale phenomena is of general
interest for both laboratory and space plasma physics. In this paper we
investigate the linear coupling between whistler waves and slow magnetosonic
solitons through two-fluid numerical simulations. Whistler waves can be trapped
in the presence of inhomogeneous external fields such as a density hump or hole
where they can propagate for times much longer than their characteristic time
scale, as shown by laboratory experiments and space measurements. Space
measurements have detected whistler waves also in correspondence to magnetic
holes, i.e., to density humps with magnetic field minima extending on
ion-scales. This raises the interesting question of how ion-scale structures
can couple to whistler waves. Slow magnetosonic solitons share some of the main
features of a magnetic hole. Using the ducting properties of an inhomogeneous
plasma as a guide, we present a numerical study of whistler waves that are
trapped and transported inside propagating slow magnetosonic solitons.Comment: Submitted to Phys. of Plasma
Observations of whistler mode waves with nonlinear parallel electric fields near the dayside magnetic reconnection separatrix by the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission
We show observations from the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission of whistler mode waves in the Earth's low-latitude boundary layer (LLBL) during a magnetic reconnection event. The waves propagated obliquely to the magnetic field toward the X line and were confined to the edge of a southward jet in the LLBL. Bipolar parallel electric fields interpreted as electrostatic solitary waves (ESW) are observed intermittently and appear to be in phase with the parallel component of the whistler oscillations. The polarity of the ESWs suggests that if they propagate with the waves, they are electron enhancements as opposed to electron holes. The reduced electron distribution shows a shoulder in the distribution for parallel velocities between 17,000 and 22,000 km/s, which persisted during the interval when ESWs were observed, and is near the phase velocity of the whistlers. This shoulder can drive Langmuir waves, which were observed in the high-frequency parallel electric field data
The Search Coil Magnetometer for THEMIS
International audienceTHEMIS instruments incorporate a tri-axial Search Coil Magnetometer (SCM) designed to measure the magnetic components of waves associated with substorm breakup and expansion. The three search coil antennas cover the same frequency bandwidth, from 0.1 Hz to 4 kHz, in the ULF/ELF frequency range. They extend, with appropriate Noise Equivalent Magnetic Induction (NEMI) and sufficient overlap, the measurements of the fluxgate magnetometers. The NEMI of the searchcoil antennas and associated pre-amplifiers is smaller than 0.76 pT/ p Hz at 10 Hz.The analog signals produced by the searchcoils and associated preamplifiers are digitized and processed inside the IDPU, together with data from the EFI instrument. Searchcoil telemetry includes waveform transmission, FFT processed data, and data from a filter bank. The frequency range covered in waveform depends on the available telemetry. The searchcoils and their three axis structures have been precisely calibrated in a quiet site, and the calibration of the transfer function is checked on board usually once per orbit. The tri-axial searchcoils implemented on the five THEMIS spacecraft are working nominally
Chorus source region localization in the Earth's outer magnetosphere using THEMIS measurements
Discrete ELF/VLF chorus emissions, the most intense electromagnetic plasma
waves observed in the Earth's radiation belts and outer magnetosphere, are
thought to propagate roughly along magnetic field lines from a localized
source region near the magnetic equator towards the magnetic poles. THEMIS
project Electric Field Instrument (EFI) and Search Coil Magnetometer (SCM)
measurements were used to determine the spatial scale of the chorus source
localization region on the day side of the Earth's outer magnetosphere. We
present simultaneous observations of the same chorus elements registered
onboard several THEMIS spacecraft in 2007 when all the spacecraft were in the
same orbit. Discrete chorus elements were observed at 0.15–0.25 of the
local electron gyrofrequency, which is typical for the outer magnetosphere.
We evaluated the Poynting flux and wave vector distribution and obtained
chorus wave packet quasi-parallel propagation to the local magnetic field.
Amplitude and phase correlation data analysis allowed us to estimate the
characteristic spatial correlation scale transverse to the local magnetic
field to be in the 2800–3200 km range
HD 173977: An ellipsoidal d Scuti star variable
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v. 426, p. 247-252, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20034068International audienc
HD 51106 and HD 50747: an ellipsoidal binary and a triple system observed with CoRoT
We present an analysis of the observations of HD 51106 and HD 50747 by the
satellite CoRoT, obtained during its initial run, and of the spectroscopic
preparatory observations.
AIMS: We complete an analysis of the light curve, extract the main
frequencies observed, and discuss some preliminary interpretations about the
stars.
Methods: We used standard Fourier transform and pre-whitening methods to
extract information about the periodicities of the stars.
Results: HD 51106 is an ellipsoidal binary, the light curve of which can be
completely explained by the tidal deformation of the star and smaller secondary
effects. HD 50747 is a triple system containing a variable star, which exhibits
many modes of oscillation with periods in the range of a few hours. On the
basis of this period range and the analysis of the physical parameters of the
star, we conclude that HD 50747 is a Gamma-Doradus star.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, use (Astronomy-Astrophysics format/macro LAtex
The STAFF-DWP wave instrument on the DSP equatorial spacecraft: description and first results
The STAFF-DWP wave instrument on board the equatorial spacecraft (TC1) of the Double Star Project consists of a combination of 2 instruments which are a heritage of the Cluster mission: the Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Field Fluctuations (STAFF) experiment and the Digital Wave-Processing experiment (DWP). On DSP-TC1 STAFF consists of a three-axis search coil magnetometer, used to measure magnetic fluctuations at frequencies up to 4 kHz and a waveform unit, up to 10 Hz, plus snapshots up to 180 Hz. DWP provides several onboard analysis tools: a complex FFT to fully characterise electromagnetic waves in the frequency range 10 Hz-4 kHz, a particle correlator linked to the PEACE electron experiment, and compression of the STAFF waveform data. The complementary Cluster and TC1 orbits, together with the similarity of the instruments, permits new multi-point studies. The first results show the capabilities of the experiment, with examples in the different regions of the magnetosphere-solar wind system that have been encountered by DSP-TC1 at the beginning of its operational phase. An overview of the different kinds of electromagnetic waves observed on the dayside from perigee to apogee is given, including the different whistler mode waves (hiss, chorus, lion roars) and broad-band ULF emissions. The polarisation and propagation characteristics of intense waves in the vicinity of a bow shock crossing are analysed using the dedicated PRASSADCO tool, giving results compatible with previous studies: the broad-band ULF waves consist of a superimposition of different wave modes, whereas the magnetosheath lion roars are right-handed and propagate close to the magnetic field. An example of a combined Cluster DSP-TC1 magnetopause crossing is given. This first case study shows that the ULF wave power intensity is higher at low latitude (DSP) than at high latitude (Cluster). On the nightside in the tail, a first wave event comparison - in a rather quiet time interval - is shown. It opens the doors to future studies, such as event timing during substorms, to possibly determine their onset location
Electron scale structures and magnetic reconnection signatures in the turbulent magnetosheath
Collisionless space plasma turbulence can generate reconnecting thin current
sheets as suggested by recent results of numerical magnetohydrodynamic
simulations. The MMS mission provides the first serious opportunity to check if
small ion-electron-scale reconnection, generated by turbulence, resembles the
reconnection events frequently observed in the magnetotail or at the
magnetopause. Here we investigate field and particle observations obtained by
the MMS fleet in the turbulent terrestrial magnetosheath behind quasi-parallel
bow shock geometry. We observe multiple small-scale current sheets during the
event and present a detailed look of one of the detected structures. The
emergence of thin current sheets can lead to electron scale structures where
ions are demagnetized. Within the selected structure we see signatures of ion
demagnetization, electron jets, electron heating and agyrotropy suggesting that
MMS spacecraft observe reconnection at these scales
Confirmation of simultaneous p and g mode excitation in HD 8801 and Gamma Peg from time-resolved multicolour photometry of six candidate "hybrid" pulsators
We carried out a multi-colour time-series photometric study of six stars
claimed as "hybrid" p and g mode pulsators in the literature. Gamma Peg was
confirmed to show short-period oscillations of the Beta Cep type and
simultaneous long-period pulsations typical of Slowly Pulsating B (SPB) stars.
From the measured amplitude ratios in the Stromgren uvy passbands, the
stronger of the two short period pulsation modes was identified as radial; the
second is l=1. Three of the four SPB-type modes are most likely l=1 or 2.
Comparison with theoretical model calculations suggests that Gamma Peg is
either an 8.5 solar mass radial fundamental mode pulsator or a 9.6 solar mass
first radial overtone pulsator. HD 8801 was corroborated as a "hybrid" Delta
Sct Gamma Dor star; four pulsation modes of the Gamma Dor type were detected,
and two modes of the Delta Sct type were confirmed. Two pulsational signals
between the frequency domains of these two known classes of variables were
confirmed and another was newly detected. These are either previously unknown
types of pulsation, or do not originate from HD 8801. The O-type star HD 13745
showed small-amplitude slow variability on a time scale of 3.2 days. This
object may be related to the suspected new type of supergiant SPB stars, but a
rotational origin of its light variations cannot be ruled out at this point. 53
Psc is an SPB star for which two pulsation frequencies were determined and
identified with low spherical degree. The behaviour of 53 Ari and Iota Her is
consistent with non-variability during our observations, and we could not
confirm light variations of the comparison star 34 Psc previously suspected.
The use of signal-to-noise criteria in the analysis of data sets with strong
aliasing is critically discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, accepted by MNRA
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