The Relative Prevalence of Wave Packets and Coherent Structures in the Inertial and Kinetic Ranges of Turbulence as Seen by Solar Orbiter
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35673Date
2024-08-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The Solar Orbiter (SO) mission provides the opportunity to study the evolution of solar wind turbulence. We use
SO observations of nine extended intervals of homogeneous turbulence to determine when turbulent magnetic field
fluctuations may be characterized as: (i) wave packets and (ii) coherent structures (CSs). We perform the first
systematic scale-by-scale decomposition of the magnetic field using two wavelets known to resolve wave packets
and discontinuities, the Daubechies 10 (Db10) and Haar, respectively. The probability distribution functions
(PDFs) of turbulent fluctuations on small scales exhibit stretched tails, becoming Gaussian at the outer scale of the
cascade. Using quantile–quantile plots, we directly compare the wavelet fluctuations PDFs, revealing three distinct
regimes of behavior. Deep within the inertial range (IR) both decompositions give essentially the same fluctuation
PDFs. Deep within the kinetic range (KR) the PDFs are distinct as the Haar decompositions have larger variance
and more extended tails. On intermediate scales, spanning the IR–KR break, the PDF is composed of two
populations: a core of common functional form containing ∼97% of fluctuations, and tails that are more extended
for the Haar decompositions than the Db10 decompositions. This establishes a crossover between wave-packet
(core) and CS (tail) phenomenology in the IR and KR, respectively. The range of scales where the PDFs are twocomponent is narrow at 0.9 au (4–16 s) and broader (0.5–8 s) at 0.4 au. As CS and wave–wave interactions are both
candidates to mediate the turbulent cascade, these results offer new insights into the distinct physics of the IR
and KR.
Publisher
IOP PublishingCitation
Bendt, Chapman, Dudok de Wit. The Relative Prevalence of Wave Packets and Coherent Structures in the Inertial and Kinetic Ranges of Turbulence as Seen by Solar Orbiter. The Astrophysical Journal (ApJ). 2024;971(2)Metadata
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