4.5 Article

Solar wind spatial scales in and comparisons of hourly Wind and ACE plasma and magnetic field data

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AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2004JA010649

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[1] Hourly averaged interplanetary magnetic field ( IMF) and plasma data from the Advanced Composition Explorer ( ACE) and Wind spacecraft, generated from 1 to 4 min resolution data time-shifted to Earth have been analyzed for systematic and random differences. ACE moments-based proton densities are larger than Wind/Solar Wind Experiment (SWE) fits-based densities by up to 18%, depending on solar wind speed. ACE temperatures are less than Wind/SWE temperatures by up to similar to25%. ACE densities and temperatures were normalized to equivalent Wind values in National Space Science Data Center's creation of the OMNI2 data set that contains 1963-2004 solar wind field and plasma data and other data. For times of ACE-Wind transverse separations <60 R-E, random differences between Wind values and normalized ACE values are similar to0.2 nT for \B\, similar to0.45 nT for IMF Cartesian components, similar to5 km/s for flow speed, and similar to15 and similar to30% for proton densities and temperatures. These differences grow as a function of transverse separation more rapidly for IMF parameters than for plasma parameters. Autocorrelation analyses show that spatial scales become progressively shorter for the parameter sequence: flow speed, IMF magnitude, plasma density and temperature, IMF X and Y components, and IMF Z component. IMF variations have shorter scales at solar quiet times than at solar active times, while plasma variations show no equivalent solar cycle dependence.

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