html5-img
1 / 21

Planetary turbulence

FP 7 STORM kick off meeting Brussels, 20 – 21 February, 2013 _________________________________________________________________________. Planetary turbulence. Z. Vörös Space Research Institute Austrian Academy of Sciences Graz, Austria Email: zoltan.voeroes@oeaw.ac.at. Outline. Methods

lapis
Télécharger la présentation

Planetary turbulence

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FP 7 STORM kick off meeting Brussels, 20 – 21 February, 2013 _________________________________________________________________________ Planetary turbulence Z. Vörös Space Research Institute Austrian Academy of Sciences Graz, Austria Email: zoltan.voeroes@oeaw.ac.at

  2. Outline • Methods • Observations • Future plans

  3. Methods • Single and multi-point measurements ESA/NASA spacecraft single and multi-point techniques Planned clusters of probes: Cluster (separations: 100s – 1000s km) Themis Artemis from 100s km to tens RE Non-planned configurations: Large separations mainly in the solar wind

  4. Methods • Approach • Fully developed turbulence • Description  fully statistical  second and higher order statistics • Wave turbulence • Description  statistical + wave modes .... and a mixture

  5. Methods - second order (Gaussian) - PSD ( matlab, eg. pwelch.m), wavelet, Hilbert transform, fractals (matlab libs) OUTPUT: spectral scaling, wave modes, dynamic spectra, anisotropy,etc. - correlation functions OUTPUT: de/correlation length, etc. • higher order (non-Gaussian) - Probability distribution function (PDF) of fluctuations - PDF moments, skewness, curtosis, etc. or L-moments better for short intervals - structure functions, LIM - multifractals • interdependence of statistical moments - nonlocality

  6. Methods can we observe intermittency? 1. NO 2. ???? non-stationarity mixing - second order (Gaussian) - PSD ( matlab, eg. pwelch.m), wavelet, Hilbert transform, fractals (matlab libs) OUTPUT: spectral scaling, wave modes, dynamic spectra, anisotropy, etc. - correlation functions OUTPUT: de/correlation length, etc. • higher order (non-Gaussian) - Probability distribution function (PDF) of fluctuations - PDF moments, skewness, curtosis, etc. or L-moments better for short intervals (matlab libs) - structure functions, LIM - multifractals • interdependence of statistical moments - nonlocality can we observe intermittency? 1. YES 2. ???? finite size effects in space??

  7. Observations • Intrinsic magnetospheres (Earth, Saturn) • Induced magnetospheres (Venus, Mars)

  8. Observations: Earth‘s magnetosphere Boundaries everywhere Walker et al., Space Sci.Rev., 1999 ~ 30-50 RE Bursty Flow 1-3RE e.g. Hughes, 1995; in K&R e.g. Kivelson & Russel, Intro to Space Physics,1995

  9. Observations: Earth‘s magnetosphere The first challange is that the magnetosphere is structured and the layers are thin  short in time The boundaries between different structures in terms of magnetic field, density, temperature, plasma beta, etc. are not always clear!! Warning: boundary crossing measurements lead to false intermittency spacecraft trajectory

  10. Turbulent spectra: geospace Downstream of the bow shock Alexandrova et al., 2004 slope:1.66 Cusp region Nykyri et al. 2006 slope:4.9 slope:2.4 Plasma sheet Volwerk et al., 2004 slope:3.5 slope:2.5-2.7 Magnetosheath Downstream of QP bow shock Yordanova et al., 2008

  11. Echim et al, 2007 ?? Magnetosheath LOBE CUSP Scale-dependent intermittency

  12. Observations: Earth‘s magnetosphere The first challange is that the magnetosphere is structured and the layers are thin  short in time The boundaries between different structures in terms of magnetic field, density, temperature, plasma beta, etc. are not always clear!! Warning boundary crossing measurements lead to false intermittency spacecraft trajectory The second challange is that the magnetosphere´s layers have finite thickness and are dynamically evolving in time and space; Warning false or different type of intermittency detection

  13. MAGNETOTAIL LOBE Vörös, 2013 Example of false intermittency due to the large-scale motions and flapping of the magnetotail

  14. Observations: Earth‘s magnetosphere The first challange is that the magnetosphere is structured and the layers are thin  short in time The boundaries between different structures in terms of magnetic field, density, temperature, plasma beta, etc. are not always clear!! Warning boundary crossing measurements lead to false intermittency spacecraft trajectory The second challange is that the magnetosphere´s layers have finite thickness and are dynamically evolving in time and space; Warning false or different type of intermittency detection The third challange is represented by scale-dependent instabilities and self-organisation: storm/substrom, reconnection. Warning false or different type of intermittency detection

  15. False intermittency due to multiple reconnection outflows Plasma sheet • Multiple flows: • (Intervals A, B) • V ~ (0-1000) km/s; •  ~ (0.5 – 3); • cf~ (0 – 150); • frequency ↛wavenumber. • Individual flows: • (e.g. interval C) • V ~ 750+- 150 km/s; •  ~ 2.5 +- 0.3; • cf >> 0 ; • frequency  wavenumber. Vörös et al. 2006

  16. Scaling within individual and multiple flows Independent driving sources Individual flows: stationary Multiple flows: mixed, non-stationary; signature of false intermittency

  17. Taylor hyp. is not working in slow/no tail flows TWO-POINT Spatial fluctuations between Cluster 1,4: Spatial temporal ONE-POINT Time-delayed fluctuations: (Vörös et al. 2006)

  18. Observations: VENUS (induced magnetosphere) Bow shock Vörös et al. 2008 Magnetopause

  19. Observations: VENUS (induced magnetosphere) Intermittency is present in turbulent boundaries over small scales. Vörös et al., 2008

  20. Observations: VENUS (induced magnetosphere) Hmmm...

  21. FUTURE PLANS = COLLECTING IDEAS

More Related