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Electron Energy Partition across Interplanetary Shocks. I. Methodology and Data Product.

Authors :
Wilson LB 3rd
Chen LJ
Wang S
Schwartz SJ
Turner DL
Stevens ML
Kasper JC
Osmane A
Caprioli D
Bale SD
Pulupa MP
Salem CS
Goodrich KA
Source :
The Astrophysical journal. Supplement series [Astrophys J Suppl Ser] 2019 Jul 03; Vol. 243 (1).
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Analyses of 15,314 electron velocity distribution functions (VDFs) within ±2 hr of 52 interplanetary (IP) shocks observed by the Wind spacecraft near 1 au are introduced. The electron VDFs are fit to the sum of three model functions for the cold dense core, hot tenuous halo, and field-aligned beam/strahl component. The best results were found by modeling the core as either a bi-kappa or a symmetric (or asymmetric) bi-self-similar VDF, while both the halo and beam/strahl components were best fit to bi-kappa VDF. This is the first statistical study to show that the core electron distribution is better fit to a self-similar VDF than a bi-Maxwellian under all conditions. The self-similar distribution deviation from a Maxwellian is a measure of inelasticity in particle scattering from waves and/or turbulence. The ranges of values defined by the lower and upper quartiles for the kappa exponents are κ <subscript> ec </subscript> ~ 5.40-10.2 for the core, κ <subscript> eh </subscript> ~ 3.58-5.34 for the halo, and κ <subscript> eb </subscript> ~ 3.40-5.16 for the beam/strahl. The lower-to-upper quartile range of symmetric bi-self-similar core exponents is s <subscript> ec </subscript> ~ 2.00-2.04, and those of asymmetric bi-self-similar core exponents are p <subscript> ec </subscript> ~ 2.20-4.00 for the parallel exponent and q <subscript> ec </subscript> ~ 2.00-2.46 for the perpendicular exponent. The nuanced details of the fit procedure and description of resulting data product are also presented. The statistics and detailed analysis of the results are presented in Paper II and Paper III of this three-part study.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0067-0049
Volume :
243
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Astrophysical journal. Supplement series
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31806920
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/ab22bd