INFINA (EX INFIP)   05545
INSTITUTO DE FISICA INTERDISCIPLINARIA Y APLICADA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Supersonic mixing layers: stability of magnetospheric flanks models
Autor/es:
G. GNAVI; F. T. GRATTON; C. J. FARRUGIA; L. BILBAO
Revista:
Journal of Physics: JPCS
Referencias:
Año: 2008
ISSN:
1742-6588
Resumen:
Compressibility has a strong influence on the stability of velocity shear layers when the difference of velocity ¦¤V across the flow becomes supersonic. The flanks of the Earth´s magnetopause are normally supersonic Ms > 1, and super-Alfv¨¦nic MA > 1, depending on the distance from the dayside terminator (Ms and MA are the sonic and Alfv¨¦n Mach numbers of the magnetosheath plasma, respectively). The stability of MHD supersonic flows depends, also on several other features, such as the finite thickness ¦¤ of the boundary layer, the relative orientation of velocity and magnetic fields, the density jump across the boundary and the magnetic shear angle. We analyze the MHD stability of some representative flank sites modeled after data from spacecraft crossings of the magnetopause under different interplanetary conditions, complementing these cases with extrapolations of likely conditions upstream, and downstream of the crossing site. Under northward interplanetary magnetic field conditions, there are solar wind regimes such that the near, but already supersonic, flank of the magnetopause may be locally stable. Stability is possible, e.g., when Ms becomes larger than ~1.2-1.4 while MA remains smaller than 1.2, and there is magnetic shear between the geomagnetic and the interplanetary magnetic field. Solar winds favouring local stability of the boundary layer are cold, not-too-dense plasmas, with strong magnetic fields, so that MA is smaller, while Ms is larger, than normal values of the magnetosheath flow. A gap between dayside and tail amplifying regions of Kelvin-Helmholtz disturbances over the magnetopause may exist when the above conditions are realized.¦¤V across the flow becomes supersonic. The flanks of the Earth´s magnetopause are normally supersonic Ms > 1, and super-Alfv¨¦nic MA > 1, depending on the distance from the dayside terminator (Ms and MA are the sonic and Alfv¨¦n Mach numbers of the magnetosheath plasma, respectively). The stability of MHD supersonic flows depends, also on several other features, such as the finite thickness ¦¤ of the boundary layer, the relative orientation of velocity and magnetic fields, the density jump across the boundary and the magnetic shear angle. We analyze the MHD stability of some representative flank sites modeled after data from spacecraft crossings of the magnetopause under different interplanetary conditions, complementing these cases with extrapolations of likely conditions upstream, and downstream of the crossing site. Under northward interplanetary magnetic field conditions, there are solar wind regimes such that the near, but already supersonic, flank of the magnetopause may be locally stable. Stability is possible, e.g., when Ms becomes larger than ~1.2-1.4 while MA remains smaller than 1.2, and there is magnetic shear between the geomagnetic and the interplanetary magnetic field. Solar winds favouring local stability of the boundary layer are cold, not-too-dense plasmas, with strong magnetic fields, so that MA is smaller, while Ms is larger, than normal values of the magnetosheath flow. A gap between dayside and tail amplifying regions of Kelvin-Helmholtz disturbances over the magnetopause may exist when the above conditions are realized.