Proton Heating in Imbalanced Alfvénic Turbulence

ORAL

Abstract

Alfvénic turbulence in the low-β solar wind is often highly imbalanced, with the outward-propagating Alfvén fluctuations being much more energetic than the inward-propagating ones. Under these conditions, a "helicity barrier" allows only the balanced portion of the turbulent flux to proceed past proton gyroscales. We have performed two Pegasus++ hybrid-kinetic particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of imbalanced turbulence at proton β=[0.3,1/16], which robustly demonstrate the emergence of the helicity barrier at the lowest to-date β in a hybrid-PIC simulation and further motivate the presence of the barrier in the low-β solar wind. Both simulations realize a saturated state in which the ratio of proton to electron heating is consistent with the ratio of imbalanced to balanced turbulent flux and fluctuations exhibit a critically balanced cascade down to proton inertial length scales parallel (kdp ~ 1) and proton gyroradius scales perpendicular (kρp ~ 1) to the mean magnetic field. Using both a Fokker—Planck and quasi-linear analysis, we detail the kinetic processes responsible for the energization of protons in our simulations. We then synthesize these processes into a model for proton heating in low-β, imbalanced, Alfvénic turbulence that can be validated using solar-wind observations.

*Funding is acknowledged from NASA grants NNN06AA01C and 80NSSC24K0171 as well as the NSF-funded Frontera supercomputing project at the Texas Advanced Computing Center.

Presenters

  • Evan L Yerger

    • Space Science Center, University of New Hampshire

Authors

  • Evan L Yerger

    • Space Science Center, University of New Hampshire
  • Michael Fan Zhang

    • Princeton University
  • Ben Chandran

    • University of New Hampshire
  • Matthew W Kunz

    • Princeton University
  • Jonathan Squire

    • University of Otago