Electrostatic Waves in Venus
ORAL
Abstract
As the observation proposed that the interaction between the solar wind and Venus' ionosphere leads to IAWs in the mantle region. For studying this hypothesis, a suitable hydrodynamic model based on the observational data from PVO and VEX is developed. Our model consists of two warm-charged ionospheric species, namely, hydrogen H+ and oxygen O+ ions, and streaming solar wind protons and electrons. We adopt the reductive perturbation technique to derive the three-dimensional partial differential ZK equation. The G′/G−expansion method is employed to obtain the
Soliton(quasi-parallel and oblique) and double-layer wave solutions. The conditions and propagation characteristics of the fully non-linear IAWs and their dependence on solar wind parameters are compared with the available space observations. Regarding electrostatic soliton(quasi-parallel) waves, our theoretical model predicts a maximum electric field of 7.5 mV/m and a pulse time duration of 3 ms. The output of the fast Fourier transformation power spectra of the electric field pulse is a broad-band electrostatic noise in a frequency range of ∼0.1–4 kHz.These FFT calculations are in good agreement with PVO’s observations. Therefore, we can predict other electrostatic wave propagation, soliton(oblique), and double-layer waves.
Soliton(quasi-parallel and oblique) and double-layer wave solutions. The conditions and propagation characteristics of the fully non-linear IAWs and their dependence on solar wind parameters are compared with the available space observations. Regarding electrostatic soliton(quasi-parallel) waves, our theoretical model predicts a maximum electric field of 7.5 mV/m and a pulse time duration of 3 ms. The output of the fast Fourier transformation power spectra of the electric field pulse is a broad-band electrostatic noise in a frequency range of ∼0.1–4 kHz.These FFT calculations are in good agreement with PVO’s observations. Therefore, we can predict other electrostatic wave propagation, soliton(oblique), and double-layer waves.
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Presenters
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Sara A Ali
- Department of Physics and Astronomy West Virginia University