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Wave excitation by energetic ring-distributed electron beams in the solar corona

Authors :
Zhou, X.
Muñoz, P. A.
Büchner, J.
Liu, S.
Zhou, X.
Muñoz, P. A.
Büchner, J.
Liu, S.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We analyzed properties of waves excited by mildly relativistic electron beams propagating along magnetic field with a ring-shape perpendicular momentum distribution in neutral and current-free solar coronal plasmas. These plasmas are subject to both the beam and the electron cyclotron maser (ECM) instabilities driven by the positive momentum gradient of the ring-beam electron distribution in the directions parallel and perpendicular to the ambient magnetic field, respectively. To explore the related kinetic processes self-consistently, 2.5-dimensional fully kinetic particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations were carried out. To quantify excited wave properties in different coronal conditions, we investigated the dependence of their energy and polarization on the ring-beam electron density and magnetic field. In general, electrostatic waves dominate the energetics of waves and nonlinear waves are ubiquitous. In weakly magnetized plasmas, where the electron cyclotron frequency $\omega_{ce}$ is lower than the electron plasma frequency $\omega_{pe}$, it is difficult to produce escaping electromagnetic waves with frequency $\omega > \omega_{pe}$ and small refractive index $|c k / \omega| < 1$ ($k$ and $c$ are the wavenumber and the light speed, respectively). Highly polarized and anisotropic escaping electromagnetic waves can, however, be effectively excited in strongly magnetized plasmas with $\omega_{ce}/\omega_{pe} \geq 1$. The anisotropy of the energy, circular polarization degree (CPD), and spectrogram of these escaping electromagnetic waves strongly depend on the number density ratio of the ring-beam electrons to the background electrons. In particular, their CPDs can vary from left-handed to right-handed with the decrease of the ring-beam density, which may explain some observed properties of solar radio bursts (e.g., radio spikes) from the solar corona.<br />Comment: ApJ, accepted

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1176386685
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-4357.ab6a0d