Title: Contexte physique : couplage vent solaire-magn
1 Measuring and understanding Space Plasmas
Turbulence Fouad SAHRAOUI Post-doc researcher
at CETP, Vélizy, France Now visitor at IRFU
(January 22nd- April 18th 2005)
2Outline
- What is turbulence ?
- How we measure turbulence in space plasmas?
- Magnetosheath ULF turbulence, Cluster data,
k-filtering technique. - Theoretical model
- ? General ideas on weak turbulence theory in
Hall-MHD
3Classical examples
Turbulence is observable from quantum to
cosmological scales! But what is common to
these images?
Slide borrowed from Antonio Celani
4What is turbulence (1)?
5What is turbulence ? (2)
- Essential ingredients
- Many degrees of freedom (different scales)
- All of them in non -linear interaction
(cross-scale couplings) - Main characterization
- Shape of the power spectrum
- (But also higher order statistics, pdf,
structure functions, )
6Role of turbulence in space
- Basically the same consequences as in
hydrodynamics - (more efficient diffusion, anomalous
transports, ) - But still more important because in collisionless
media - no normal transport at all ? role of the
created small scales - And of different nature because plasma
turbulence - Existence of a variety of linear modes of
propagation - (? incompressible hydrodynamics)
- Role of a static magnetic field on the
anisotropies
7Turbulence in the magnetosheath
104km
10 km
Creates the small scales where micro-physical
processes occur ? potential role for driving
reconnection But how ?
8Turbulent spectra and the cascade scenario
9Theory vs measurements (1)
- Turbulence theories predict spatial (i.e.
stationnary) spectra - Incompressible fluid turbulence (K-1941) ? k -5/3
- Incompressible isotropic MHD (IK-1965) ? k -3/2
- Incompressible anisotropic MHD (SG-2000) ? k? -2
- Whistler turbulence (DB-1997) ? k 7/3
But measurements provide only temporal spectra,
here B2?sc-7/3
10Theory vs measurements (2)
How to infer the spatial spectrum from the
temporal one measured in the spacecraft frame
B2?sc-7/3 ? B2k ????
- Few contexts (e.g. solar wind) using Taylors
hypothesis - v gtgt v? ? ?sc k.v ? B2(?sc) B2(kv)
- Only the k spectrum along the flow is accessible
(2 dimensions are lost)
- General contexts (e.g. magnetosheath)
- v v? ? Taylors hypothesis is useless
- The only way is to use multi-spacecraft
measurements and appropriate methods
11Cluster data and the k-filtering method
Provides, by using a NL filter bank approach, an
optimum estimation of the spectral energy density
P(w,k) from simultaneous multipoints measurements
- Had been validated by numerical simulations
(Pinçon Lefeuvre, JGR, 1991) - Applied for the first time to real data with
CLUSTER (Sahraoui et al., JGR, 2003)
12How it works?
- S(?) 12x12 generalized spectral matrix
- S(?)?B(?)BT(?)?
- with BT(?)B1T(?),B2T(?),B3T(?),B4T(?)
- H(k) spatial matrix related to the tetrahedron
- HTId3?e-ik.r1,Id3 e-ik.r2,Id3 e-ik.r3,Id3
e-ik.r4
? V(?,k) matrix including additional information
on the data (??Bi 0).
? it allows the identification of multiple k for
each wsc More numerous the correlations are,
more trustable is the estimate of the energy
distribution in k space ? it works quite well
with the 3 B components, but will still be
improved by including the 2 E components (That is
why Im at IRFU!)
13limits of validity
Generic to all techniques intending to correlate
fluctuations from a finite number of points.
Two main points to be careful with
- Relative homogeneity /Stationarity
- Spatial Aliasing effect (l gt spacecraft
separation)
Two satellites cannot distignuish between k1 and
k2 if ?k.r12 2?n
For Cluster ?k ? n1 ?k1 ? n2 ?k2 ? n3 ?k3 with
?k1(r31?r21)2?/V, ?k2(r41?r21)2?/V,
?k3 (r41?r31)2?/V V r41.(r31?r21)
(Neubaur Glassmeir, 1990)
14What can we do with P(w,k) ?1- modes
identification
For each wsc
- the spatial energy distribution is calculated
P(wsc,kx,ky,kz)
- the LF linear theoretical dispersion relations
are calculated and Doppler shifted
f(wsc,kx,ky,kz)0 - Ex Alfvén mode wsc-kz VAk.v
- for each kz plan containing a significant
maximum, the (kx,ky) isocontours of
P(wsc,kx,ky,kz) and f(wsc,kx,ky,kz)0 are then
superimposed
15Application to Cluster magnetic data
16Mirror mode identification
Result The energy of the spectrum is injected by
a mirror instability well described by the linear
kinetic theory (Sahraoui et al., Ann., 2004)
17Studying higher frequencies
Observation of mirror structures over a wide
range of frequencies in the satellite frame, but
all prove to be stationary in the plasma frame.
18What can we do with P(w,k) ?2- calculating
integrated k-spectra
- But how can we interpret the observed small
scales k? 3.5 ?
Energy distribution of the identified mirror
structures ?
(v,n) 104 (v,Bo,) 110 (n,Bo) 81
First direct determination of a fully 3-D
k-spectra in space anistropic behaviour is
proven to occur along Bo, n, and v
19Towards a new hydrodynamic-like turbulence theory
for mirror sturctures
20Main conclusions
- Power spectra provide most of the underlying
physics on turbulence - First 3-D k-spectrum evidence of strong
anisotropies (Bo, v, n) - Evidence of a 1-D direct cascade of mirror
structures from an injection scale (Lv1800 km)
up to 150 km with a new law kv-8/3
- Main consequences
- Turbulence theories nothing comparable to the
existing theories compressibility, anisotropy,
kineticfluid aspects, - ? need of a new theory of a fluid type BUT which
includes the observed kinetic effects (under work
) - Reconnection
- - How can the new law be used in reconnection
models ? open - - Necessity to explore much smaller scales ?
MMS (2010?)
21Theory general presentation
22Different approaches
- Many different theoretical approaches of
turbulence - Phenomenological
- A priori assumptions on the isotropy
- use of the physical equations through crude,
but efficient, dimensional arguments - Ex K41? k -5/3
- IK ? k -3/2
- Statistical weak vs strong turbulence
- Find statistically stationary states by solving
directly the physical equations - ? huge calculations requiring numerical
investigations
23Weak/wave turbulence
- is applicable only when linear solutions exist
a(k,t)akei?t - Two basic assumptions
- weak non linear effects ? perturbation theory H
Ho ?H - ?H?Ho with ? ltlt1
- Scale separation 1/? lt ?WT ltlt ?NL
24Weak turbulence theory in Hall-MHD
Weak turbulence theory mainly developed in
incompressible ideal MHD (Galtier et al., 2000 ?
k? -2) Few recent developments for EMHD (but
still incompressible)
But observations (e.g. magnetosheath) strongly
suggest the presence of scales ? gt ?ci and
compressibility ? Hall-MHD
25Hall-MHD a step between ideal MHD and bi-fluid
Bi-fluid
Hall-MHD
w kc
w/wci
w/wci
fast
intermediate
Hall-MHD domain
slow
fast
fast
intermediate
ideal MHD domain
kr
slow
kr
6 propagation modes
3 propagation modes
26Weak turbulence theory in Hall-MHD
- Using the physical variables ??, ?v, ?b
intractable directly
- Problem
- No way to diagonalize the system, i.e. express it
in terms of only 3 variables, x1, x2, x3, each
characteristic of one mode. The physical
variables always remain inextricably tangled in
the non linear terms
- Solution Hamiltonian formalism of continuous
media - Has proved to be efficient in other physical
fields particle physics, quantum field theory,
, but is still less known in plasma physics
27Advantage of the Hamiltonian formalism
- It allows to introduce the amplitude of each
mode
as a canonical variable of the system
- Canonique formulation (to be built)
-
- Appropriate canonical transformation
- Diagonalisation
28How to build a canonical formulation of the
MHD-Hall system ?
- Bi-fluide ? MHD-Hall
- First we construct a canonical formulation of the
bi-fluid system, then we reduce to the one of
the Hall-MHD
How to deal with the bi-fluid system ?
by generalizing the variationnal principle
Lagrangian of the compressible hydrodynamic
(Clebsch variables) electromagnetic Lagrangian
introduction of new Lagrangian invariants
29New Lagrangian invariant
30Bi-fluid canonical description
31Réduction to Hall-MHD
- Néglecting the displacement current
? Intermediate regime Reduced Bi-Fluid
non-relativistic, quasi-neutral BUT still keep
the electron inertia (? ?ce)
32(Sahraoui et al., Phys. Plas., 2003)
33Future steps for a weak-turbulence theory
- Hall-MHD
- Derive the kinetic equations of waves
- Find the stationary solutions
- Power law spectra of the Kolmogorov-Zakharov type
?
- Beyond Hall-MHD
- See how to include mirror mode (anisotropic
Hall-MHD?) and dissipation.