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BRIEF RESEARCH REPORT article

Front. Phys., 12 April 2021
Sec. Space Physics
This article is part of the Research Topic Advances in Space Plasma Turbulence: Theory and Observations View all 7 articles

On the Origin of High–Frequency Magnetic Fluctuations in the Interplanetary Medium: A Brownian–like Approach

  • 1Dipartimento di Fisica, Università Della Calabria, Rende, Italy
  • 2Direzione Scientifica, Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica, Roma, Italy
  • 3Department of Astrophysics/IMAPP, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands
  • 4LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, Université PSL, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, Université de Paris, Meudon, France
  • 5INAF-Istituto di Astrofisica e Planetologia Spaziali, Roma, Italy

Low–frequency fluctuations in the interplanetary medium have been extensively investigated and described in the framework of turbulence, and the observed universal scaling behavior represents a clear signature of the underlying energy cascade. On the contrary, the interpretation of observations of plasma fluctuations at high frequencies, where wave–wave coupling, collisionless dissipation, and anomalous plasma heating play a key role, still represents a challenge for theoretical modeling. In this paper the high frequency fluctuations occurring in the interplanetary space are described through a Brownian–like approach, where the plasma dynamics at small scales is described through a stochastic process. It is shown that a simple model based on this framework is able to successfully reproduce the main features of the spectrum of the observed magnetic fluctuations. Moreover, the Fluctuation-Dissipation Relation, derived by our model, leads to a power law between dissipation rate and temperature, which is compatible with the occurrence of Landau damping, interpreted thus as the main mechanism of dissipation in the solar wind plasma.

1 Introduction

Since the first measurements of magnetic fluctuations in the interplanetary space [1], showing that the spectral magnetic energy density decays with the frequency ω as E(ω)ω5/3, it has been argued that they can be described in the framework of turbulence [2]. This approach has been also successfully applied to interpret anomalous scalings due to intermittency of fluctuations [36] through multifractal models [711], and the nonlinear energy cascade, described by a Yaglom relation for the mixed third–order moment of fluctuations [1215]. The scale–free behavior breaks down at a frequency fi, usually found in the range between 0.1 and 1 Hz [16, 17], beyond which fluid or Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) regimes are not valid anymore. Beyond this scale, a steeper power spectrum is observed E(ω)ωα [1719], the slope being strongly dependent on the analyzed sample. A statistical analysis of spectral slopes shows that α covers the range [2, 3], with a peak at about α2.8 [19]. The presence of fluctuations at high frequencies has been attributed to dispersive phenomena generated by velocity–space effects and electron dynamics [20, 21, 22], and interpreted in terms of a further turbulent energy cascade driven by wave–wave coupling, as for example a quasi two–dimensional cascade of Kinetic Alfvén Waves (KAWs) [17] for which E(ω)ω7/3. However, a clear detection of single wave modes in the frequency-wavenumber diagram is difficult due to the presence of large scattering, sideband modes, sporadic wave–trains as envelope solitons, and zero–frequency modes [23, 24]. Moreover, the situation is complicated by the failure of the Taylor hypothesis, implying that measurements in the time domain cannot be simply translated into the wave-vector domain [25]. Statistical analyses of many intervals of magnetic field data from Cluster spacecraft (see e.g., [17, 18]) indicate the presence of another breakpoint fe in the magnetic energy power spectrum at higher frequencies, of the order of few tens of Hz, associated with electron scales.

Contrary to the low frequency spectrum (ω<ωi, where ωi=2πfi), succesfully described in the nonlinear energy cascade turbulence framework, the interpretation of the spectrum at high frequencies (ω>ωi) is less clear. Indeed, several models, which differs in their physical assumptions, have been developed to reproduce the observed spectra. The power spectrum for ω>ωi has been fitted either through a function made by a combination of ω8/3 decay and an exponential decay, compatible with the proton Landau damping of magnetic fluctuations [18], or by a combinantion of two power laws [17, 19]. In the latter case, the statistical distributions of the two slopes, as obtained by the analysis of a large number of CLUSTER spectra, are narrow and centered around α2.8 (for ωiωωe, where ωe=2πfe) and α4 (for ωωe), respectively. In this paper we deal with the problem of the origin of high frequency magnetic fluctuations in the interplanetary medium through a novel approach, to investigate whether the whole spectrum for ω>ωi can be described by means of a single physical model.

2 Model and Results

At small scales (high frequencies), smaller than the ion gyro–radius or inertial length, the plasma dynamics in the interplanetary space is extremely complex. More specifically, the linear mode waves become kinetic, exhibiting simultaneously a dispersive and dissipative character due to wave–particle interactions such as coherent scattering processes or incoherent processes (like pitch angle scattering). The collissionless damping mechanisms include cyclotron damping [26], Landau damping [27], energization of particles at current sheets, that can be spontaneously generated by an intermittent turbulent cascade [2833], and stochastic heating [3438].

It is generally agreed that the nonlinear energy cascade, which is surely active at the largest scales, transfers energy beyond the ion–cyclotron frequency (see e.g., [2] and Refs. therein), mainly exciting electric fluctuations [39], while the energy content in the magnetic fluctuations is lower (see e.g., [40]. At the same time, fluctuations are damped by plasma kinetic effects, thus providing a mechanism for heating in the collisionless plasma. The wave–particle mechanism involved in the dissipation acts as a feedback for fluctuations, as it generates particle beams which, in turn, are able to excite further fluctuations. The complex plasma dynamics at small scales, well documented in literature, involves a medium where random fluctuations and dissipation compete in generating magnetic fluctuations. In a range of scales where collisionless dissipation and plasma heating could take place and the presence of a lot of characteristic frequencies and lengths (e.g., cyclotron frequencies and inertial lenghts) breaks the scale–free behavior, the role of dispersion and dissipation is still poorly understood, and the origin of fluctuations is far from being clearly established. This framework is rather diffrent, even if compatible, from the “classical” turbulent dynamics where the nonlinear cascade operates within a scale–free range which is well separated from the smallest scales where dissipation occurs.

In order to provide a description of the high-frequency dynamics of magnetic fuctuations, a novel scenario, based on a stochastic Brownian approach, is introduced in the present work. This approach allows an interpretation of the observed high frequency magnetic spectra with no assumptions about dispersion relations from plasma turbulence theory. Based on the above considerations, we consider a simple framework where magnetic fuctuations b(t) at small scales can be roughly described by a Itô stochastic differential equation

db(t)=Γ[b(t),t]dt+Ψ[b(t),t]dW(t)(1)

Here, without loss of generality, we consider only the time evolution of a single component of the fluctuations, but the model can be easily generalized to three-dimensional fluctuations or specific wavenumbers. In the simplest case, we assume that the dynamics of the fluctuations is due to two different contributions. The first contribution (first term in the right hand side) is due to the collisionless dissipative processes, which we parametrize with a linear damping term Γ[b(t),t]γb(t), proportional to a constant damping rate γ. The second contribution, which mimics all the complex plasma wave dynamics, is described through the stochastic process dW(t). For the sake of simplicity, Ψ[b(t),t] is assumed to be constant, equal to the r.m.s of the fluctuations Ψ[b(t),t]=F0=<b2>1/2. The random forcing is expressed as dW(t)=ξ(t)dt, which is the natural physically acceptable choice for an interpretation which assumes ξ(t) as a real noise, possibly different from a white noise, with finite correlation times [41]. Moreover, we assume that ξ(t) is uncorrelated with the initial values of magnetic fluctuations b(0), say <ξ(t)b(0)>=0. With these assumptions, Eq. (1) takes the following form:

db(t)=γb(t)dt+F0ξ(t)dt

Under the hypotheses described above, the Itô equation can be solved by Fourier transforms. This gives an obvious relation between the correlations of the Fourier modes of the forcing ξω and the power spectrum of magnetic energy modes bω

bωbω=F02ξωξω(γiω)(γ+iω)(2)

where brackets denote time averaging and stands for complex conjugate. Using homogeneity, we can write the spectral correlations of the forcing term as

ξωξω=2πG(ω)δ(ω+ω)

so that we can immediately write again Eq. (2) in terms of the power spectrum E(ω) which can be compared to observations in the solar wind plasmas

E(ω)=F02[G(ω)ω2+γ2](3)

The spectral energy is, therefore, related to the spectral shape G(ω) of the external forcing. As a simple example, let us suppose that magnetic fluctuations are generated by completely uncorrelated stochastic wave trains, so that ξωξω=2πδ(ω+ω). In this case the magnetic energy spectrum is given by a Lorentzian function E(ω)F02/(ω2+γ2) which, of course, does not describe the magnetic energy density spectrum as observed in the high–frequency solar wind plasma (see e.g., [17]).

As a further example, let us consider the case in which, close to the ion breakpoint, a variety of waves takes part in the process through wave–wave couplings, wave–particles interactions and dispersive effects. In this situation we can expect that the two–point correlations of the stochastic forcing term decay exponentially in time

ξ(t)ξ(t)exp[λ0(tt)](4)

where λ01 represents the correlation time. This means that ξ(t) can be considered, in a rough approximation, as a Brownian noise. The magnetic energy power spectrum E(ω) can be easily calculated from Eq. (3) by using the inverse Fourier transform to deduce G(ω) from Eq. (4), obtaining the following functional shape

E(ω)λ0F02(ω2+λ02)(ω2+γ2)(5)

In our framework, the values of the correlation time λ01 and of the dissipation rate γ correspond to the low–frequency and high–frequency breakpoints, respectively, that is λ0ωi and γωe. In particular, it is reasonable to assume, for the solar wind plasma, that the typical correlation time is represented by the proton gyration period and corresponds, thus, to the first breakpoint in our model. In the same way, the association between the second breakpoint and the dissipation rate is well-founded since the high frequency breakpoint, roughly corresponding to the electron gyro frequency, has been attributed to wave-particle interaction processes leading to the dissipation of KAWs. The main properties of the spectra observed in the interplanetary space at high frequencies (ω>ωi) are reproduced by Eq. (5). The power spectrum E(ω), as a function of ω/λ0, is shown in Figure 1, where γ/λ0=100 was chosen, as this represents a typical value of the ratio ωe/ωi found in the interplanetary space (see e.g., [17]).

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1. E(ω) vs. ω/λ0 as obtained from Eq. (5) for γ/λ0=100 (red solid line) and from Eq. (7) for μ=1.8 and γ=100 (green solid line). E(ω)ω2.8 (blue dash-dotted line) and E(ω)ω4 (black dashed line) are shown as reference.

Equation (5) is compatible with the presence of two power law ranges, similarly to what is reported for observations in some previous works [17, 19]: the first one, between the two breakpoints, with a spectral slope α2, and the second one, beyond the second breakpoint, with a slope α4. The separation between the spectral breakpoints is fixed by the ratio γ/λ0 but the slopes of the two power law ranges are independent of the parameters of the model.

Since the power law index reported in observations for the range of scales between the ion and electron breaks varies in the interval α[2;3], we can consider a more realistic case in which a continuous distribution of relaxation rates λ exists. In this case, the power spectrum of the external forcing is calculated from the superposition of all λ′s. If we assume, for instance, a distribution with a probability of occurrence dP(λ)λμdλ (where μ is a free parameter) in order to take into account phenomena with different correlation ranges, we obtain

G(ω)=λ0γλμdλω2+λ2A(μ)ω(1+μ)(6)

where A(μ)=Δ/γxμ(1+x2)1dx is a smooth function of µ, and Δ is a typical scale of the exponential decay rate of stochastic two-points correlations. Assuming Δγ, a simple direct numerical estimate gives A(μ)(0.50.13μ). The magnetic energy spectrum then becomes

E(ω)A(μ)F02ω(1+μ)(ω2+γ2)1(7)

The spectum E(ω) given by Eq. (7) is shown in Figure 1 for μ=1.8 (green solid line). The same shape E(ω) was already used by [19] to fit solar wind magnetic energy spectra measured by Cluster, well reproducing the overall shape of the spectra. Also Eq. (7) is compatible with a double power law, with a slope α1+μ for the first range. Our approach provides a physical interpretation of Eq. (7) as the result of a whole class of colored noises ξ(t), compatible with the excitation of sporadic wave trains.

When comparing the power spectra obtained from solar wind observations to those given by theoretical models, it is necessary, in general, to take into account the possible failure of the Taylor hypothesis. Measurements are obtained in the spacecraft reference frame, which is in relative motion with respect to the plasma frame of the solar wind. According to the Doppler shift formula, the measured frequency ωsc (in the spacecraft frame), of a Fourier mode of wavevector k and frequency ω, is given by ωsc=ω+kvSW, where vSW is the solar wind velocity. In the high frequency range, which represents the focus of the present work, two relevant situations can occur [42], depending on the ratio between the two terms at the right hand side. When the solar wind speed is slow enough, |ω||kvSW| and this leads to a constant shift of the frequency spectrum to higher frequency, in the spacecraft-frame, without changes in the scaling of the spectrum [42]. Therefore, the scaling predictions of our model are still valid in this situation and the only change would be a shift of both low and high frequency breakpoints by a constant value Ω0, namely ωiλ0+Ω0 and ωeγ+Ω0. The other significant case is the dispersive regime, when the plasma-frame frequency increases more rapidly than linearly and ωsc is eventually dominated by the plasma-frequency term (ωscω). Also in this case, since ωscω, the spectra of our model can be directly compared to those measured by spacecraft. Problems would arise only if we wanted to map frequency spectra to wavenumber spectra, but this is not a aim of our work, as the nature of the model proposed here is such that high frequency magnetic fluctuations are described in the time/frequency domains and the spectra given by the model are frequency spectra. In other words, in our Brownian framework observations are not interpreted in terms of turbulence and no assumptions about dispersion relations, from plasma turbulence theory, are needed.

2.1 Statistical Properties

The statistical properties of the fluctuations can be related to the properties of the macroscopic dissipation through the Sinai-Ruelle-Bowen (SRB) measure [43]. To this purpose, Eq. (1) can be reformulated as

dbjdt=α(bj,ξj)bj+F0ξj(8)

where bj denote the components of the magnetic field fluctuatons and the dissipation parameter is replaced by some unknown stochastic quantity. With a suitable choice of α(bj,ξj), which we define as

α(bj,ξj)=F0jbjξjjbj2/2μ0(9)

(μ0 being the vacuum permittivity) Eq. (8) conserves the energy

σ(t)=jbj22μ0

According to the chaotic hypothesis [44, 45], in this case it can be shown [43] that there exists a SRB measure Ω(dbj) such that the statistical properties of Eqs. (1) and (8) are the same, in the sense that for a smooth function F(bj) we have

limM1Mk=0M1F(Skbj)=AΩ(dbj)F(bj)(10)

where A is the contracting phase space and Sk represents the time evolution operator, that is, the r.h.s of Eq. (1) with t=tk. The SRB measure is proportional to

Ω(dbj)δ[bj2σ(t)]dbj

and, as expected, the average of α defines the phase-space contraction rate and is proportional to the damping rate αγ.

For systems with reversible dynamics, as those described by Eq. (8), the chaotic hypothesis and the SRB measure generally imply the Onsager reciprocity and the fluctuation-dissipation relation [46]. We consider, from the Itô equation, an equation for the average energy of magnetic fluctuations ε(t)=bj2/2μ0 in the form

dεdt+γε=F0b(t)ξ(t)(11)

The relation between the magnetic fluctuations and the random forcing term can be formally obtained, from the Itô equation, in the following way

b(t)=F00tdt'ξ(t')exp[γ(t't)]

where we set b(0)=0 for simplicity. By using this result in Eq. (11), we obtain

dεdt=2γε+2F02G(t)(12)

where

G(t)=0tξ(s)ξ(t)eγ(st)ds(13)

A nearly–stationary solution Estat for the magnetic energy exists and is finite if G(t)G0 constant. In this case Estatσ according to the chaotic hypothesis, so that we obtain the relation

EstatF02g(γ,λ,μ)(14)

where the unknown function g(γ,λ,μ) involves the dissipation rate γ, the correlation rates λ and the scaling exponent μ.

On the other hand, from the definition of the magnetic energy power spectrum and using Eq. (3), we obtain

bωbω=F02G(ω)ω2+γ2=0dtb(t)b(0)cosωt(15)

At equilibrium ω0 and G(ω)1, so that by eliminating F0 from Eqs. (15) and (14), we obtain

(B022μ0)γ2g(γ,λ,μ)Estat(16)

where B02 is the square modulus of the total magnetic field. This last equation represents a kind of Fluctuation–Dissipation Relation (FDR) [41, 47]. The use of the FDR for the description of plasma fluctuations is known since a long time (see e.g., [48]). In the context of space magnetized plasmas the FDR approach has been utilized to study electromagnetic fluctuations associated to different wave modes in various configurations (see e.g., [4952]). In the framework of the model proposed in this work, the FDR can be used to investigate the collisionless dissipation mechanism at work in the solar wind. To this aim, the function g(γ,λ,μ) can be calculated from Eq. (11), which can be formally integrated, thus obtaining, after some algebra,

ε(t)=(F02/μ0)e2γt0tdse2γs0sdt'eγ(t's)ξ(t')ξ(s)

The last equation depends on the time correlations of the forcing. For example, by using Eq. (4), we obtain g(γ,λ,μ)=1/2γ(γλ0), and hence

(γλ0)2ββ1(17)

where we defined β=(B02/2μ0)1Estat proportional to Estat. By using the more refined hypothesis involving a distribution of decorrelation times, we obtain the relation

(γλ0)h(μ)(B022μ0)1/(μ1)Estat1/(μ1)h(μ)β1/(μ1)(18)

where h(μ)=[Δ/γxμ(x1)1dx]1/(μ1) and assuming as before Δγ, a simple direct numerical estimate gives h(μ)(6μ/3)1/(μ1).

The FDR relation Eq. (18) is very interesting because it allows us to obtain information about the physical mechanism responsible for the dissipative term. If we conjecture that energy equipartition is present, as in standard statistical mechanics, we can interpret Estat as due to a statistical equilibrium at some temperaturekBT corresponding to the second moment of the velocity distribution function measured by a spacecraft. Therefore, by using the value 1+μ=8/3, which roughly represents the center of the peak of the observed distribution of slopes in the ionic scale range, Estat1/(μ1)=(kBT)3/2 and Eq. (18) gives

(γλ0)(kBT)3/2(19)

which corresponds to the classical scaling for the electron Landau damping. Therefore, according to our model the observed spectral properties of magnetic fluctuations at ionic scales are compatible with the occurrence of electron Landau damping. It is worthwhile to remark that according to our approach, the spectral properties of magnetic fluctuations are not necessarily the result of a turbulent cascade process. Rather the spectrum is a direct consequence of the FDR, which governs at the same time both fluctuations and dissipation, which represent the two ingredients of the same physical process. Of course, in a classical turbulent environment [2] the fluctuations generated by the cascade process are not subject to dissipation, which starts beyond the Kolmogorov microscale breakpoint. Our approach can be linked to kinetic turbulent cascades by using nonequilibrium ensembles in turbulence models [53, 54].

Note that assuming that the β parameter in Eq. (18) is the usual plasma-β parameter, the FDR (Eq. 18) suggests that the high-frequency spectral breakpoint shifts toward higher frequencies as the solar wind plasma-β decreases, in agreement with observations. The electron break can be hardly or no observable in the data because it can be located out of the instrumental range or hidden by the high-frequency instrumental noise (see e.g., [55]). Our approach enables, at least, to obtain an estimate of the break position even when it is out of the observable instrumental range. This is because the FDR has a predictive meaning, as the spectral properties of magnetic fluctuations depend on the parameter used to describe the dissipation, so that by measuring the parameter µ, through the magnetic power spectra at ionic scales, and the plasma-β parameter, we are able to investigate the frequency location of the electron break, even when it can not be observed.

3 Discussion

In this paper we introduce a framework to describe the high–frequency dynamics of magnetic fluctuations in the interplanetary space. Our description is rather different from the nonlinear energy cascade framework, successfully used to describe low–frequency fluctuations. By using a Brownian–like approach, we are able to describe the main properties of the magnetic energy spectra observed at high frequencies in the solar wind. We remark that the same kind of phenomenology was used by [56] to describe the susceptibility of fluctuations under the action of random forcing, within the Direct Interaction Approximation of the complex nonlinear mode couplings generated by the fluid turbulent cascade. Of course, our approach does not rule out the importance of all the complex dynamics coming from plasma physics. Kinetic plasma physics describes, indeed, all the microscopic features involved in the dynamics of fluctuations, namely the birth of the many modes involved, their nonlinear coupling, their dispersive properties, and the collissionless dissipative processes which lead to anomalous plasma–heating.

Using our approach, we describe, at the same time, both fluctuations and dissipation in the high-frequency range of solar wind plasmas, where high-frequency microphysical plasma effects are modelled as a stochastic source, whose details, in this framework, are unessential. Through the FDR, we evidence the relationship between fluctuations and dissipation in a way that, independently of the specific microphysical plasma dynamics, we can account for the main features of the spectral properties of high-frequency fluctuations in the interplanetary space. In fact, as usual in a Brownian-like approach [41], the FDR has a predictive meaning for some microphysical quantities. In our case, Eq. (18) opens a window on the high-frequency fluctuations, allowing us to estimate the position of the electron break as a function of fully measurable quantities in the solar wind, similarly to the Einstein’s approach to Brownian motion. Moreover, the scaling of the damping rate results compatible with the presence of electron Landau damping, which therefore can be identified as the main dissipation mechanism in the collisionless solar wind plasma.

Data Availability Statement

The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/Supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author/s.

Author Contributions

VC conceived the study and the model. VC and FL prepared the article draft. All the authors contributed to scientific discussions, model refinement and writing of the article.

Funding

VC, FL, and FC were supported by Italian MIUR-PRIN Grant No. 2017APKP7T on Circumterrestrial Environment: Impact of Sun-Earth Interaction.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Keywords: Interplanetary medium, interplanetary turbulence, solar wind, magnetic fields, Heliosphere

Citation: Carbone V, Lepreti F, Vecchio A, Alberti T and Chiappetta F (2021) On the Origin of High–Frequency Magnetic Fluctuations in the Interplanetary Medium: A Brownian–like Approach. Front. Phys. 9:613759. doi: 10.3389/fphy.2021.613759

Received: 03 October 2020; Accepted: 08 January 2021;
Published: 12 April 2021.

Edited by:

Petr Hellinger, Astronomical Institute , Czechia

Reviewed by:

Pablo S. Moya, University of Chile, Chile
Christian L. Vásconez, National Polytechnic School, Ecuador

Copyright © 2021 Carbone, Lepreti, Vecchio, Alberti and Chiappetta. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Fabio Lepreti, ZmFiaW8ubGVwcmV0aUB1bmljYWwuaXQ=

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