dc.description.abstract |
Solar wind has no longer remain a mystery now as in-situ measurements by different
satellites have provided us a deep picture of solar terrestrial plasma. However, it still
contains some unexplained marvels which need further theoretical as well as
observational investigations. Qne of these phenomena is the damping or growth of
different kinds of waves in the solar wind and magnetosphere. On a micro scale, waves
can grow as a result of different kinds of instabilities. In this dissertation, those
instabilities are investigated which are generated by the departure of particle
distribution function from thermal equilibrium. Such type of instabilities are termed as
micro-instabilities and are dependent upon the shape of the distribution function.
Different sources such as pressure or temperature anisotropies, relative drift or counterstreaming
particles, temperature gradients, etc. can ignite micro-instabilities. In this
dissertation we consider counter-streaming plasma and temperature anisotropies as the
source of micro-instabilities.
Observations of solar wind particle velocity distribution functions generally contain
nonthermal features which result in departure from Maxwellian distribution. These
nonthermal features of the distribution functions are well characterized by relatively
cool dense 'core', the energetic suprathermal tails 'halo' and the field aligned beam
'strahl'. It is found that cool dense population is composed of 95% of the total
population and the rest is composed of halo and strahl population. In-situ observations
reveal that near the Sun the energetic strahl and halo electron populations contain a drift
in anti-sunward direction while core contains a drift generally towards the Sun. Such a
drift among plasma species could generate Buneman or heat flux type of instabilities in
solar wind frame depending upon the type of streaming. If core and halo electrons
possess a counter relative drift in solar wind proton rest frame, it could excites
magnetosonic, Alfven or whistler heat flux instabilities. All of these instabilities are
observed near 1 AU and widely studied in literature. However, whistler heat flux
instability is reported to be the most unstable heat flux mode for realistic solar wind
conditions. Though, in this dissertation it is highlighted that it is somewhat improper to
call this left-handed evolved heat flux instability as right-handed whistler heat flux
instability. The electron heat flux instability investigated here, basically evolves out as
a primary left-hand heat flux mode, which result due to the interaction of Dopplerix
I P age
upshifted whistler and left-handed proton cyclotron mode. However, for relatively
smaller magnitude of counter-streaming drifts, only right-handed whistler heat flux
instability takes place as reported in literature. Furthermore, our investigation revealed
electron heat flux instability and electron firehose instability to be highly reminiscent
though there sources offree energy are different. Electron heat flux instability is caused
by counter-streaming of the 'Plasma and electron firehose instability by excessive
temperature parallel to the ambient magnetic field. Since solar wind plasma is
anisotropic in nature, these temperature anisotropies, being the source of microinstabilities,
can excite both electron cyclotron and proton cyclotron type of
instabilities. Of which here a comparison between electron heat flux instability and
electromagnetic electron cyclotron (EMEC) wave is presented concomitantly. This
comparison illustrated different polarizations of these two modes and confirms our
assertion that heat flux instability is not right-handed. Also heat flux instability being
left-handed mode and electromagnetic electron cyclotron being right-handed mode
exhibit different characteristics when investigated concomitantly for relative streaming
and temperature anisotropies.
Alfven instability caused by the proton temperature anisotropies has frequently been
reported in outer corona of the Sun, solar wind and terrestrial magnetosheath. In this
dissertation, we studied Alfvenic fluctuations in the solar wind by analyzing the
CLUSTER data. A linear theory is established based on the (r, q) distribution function
to investigated the growth rate of Alfven waves in presence of electron and ion
anisotropies as well as electron to ion temperature ratios. We found that growth rate
also affected by electron to ion temperature ration which was not considered previously
in literature. We also found that threshold instability curve sets in good agreement with
instability-threshold-histogram plotted for observed temperature anisotropies versus
beta. |
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