4.4 Review

The multi-scale nature of the solar wind

Journal

LIVING REVIEWS IN SOLAR PHYSICS
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s41116-019-0021-0

Keywords

Solar wind; Spacecraft measurements; Coulomb collisions; Plasma waves and turbulence; Kinetic instabilities

Funding

  1. STFC Ernest Rutherford Fellowship [ST/P003826/1]
  2. STFC Consolidated Grant [ST/S000240/1]
  3. NASA [NNX16AM23G, NNX16AG81G]
  4. STFC [ST/P003826/1, ST/S000240/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. NASA [899364, NNX16AM23G, NNX16AG81G, 904247] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The solar wind is a magnetized plasma and as such exhibits collective plasma behavior associated with its characteristic spatial and temporal scales. The characteristic length scales include the size of the heliosphere, the collisional mean free paths of all species, their inertial lengths, their gyration radii, and their Debye lengths. The characteristic timescales include the expansion time, the collision times, and the periods associated with gyration, waves, and oscillations. We review the past and present research into the multi-scale nature of the solar wind based on in-situ spacecraft measurements and plasma theory. We emphasize that couplings of processes across scales are important for the global dynamics and thermodynamics of the solar wind. We describe methods to measure in-situ properties of particles and fields. We then discuss the role of expansion effects, non-equilibrium distribution functions, collisions, waves, turbulence, and kinetic microinstabilities for the multi-scale plasma evolution.

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