Electron velocity distribution instability in magnetized plasma wakes and artificial electron mass

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Abstract

The wake behind a large object (such as the moon) moving rapidly through a plasma (such as the solar wind) contains a region of depleted density, into which the plasma expands along the magnetic field, transverse to the flow. It is shown here that (in addition to any ion instability) a bump-on-tail which is unstable appears on the electrons' parallel velocity distribution function because of the convective non-conservation of parallel energy (drift-energization). It arises regardless of any non-thermal features on the external electron velocity distribution. The detailed electron distribution function throughout the wake is calculated by integration along orbits; and the substantial energy level of resulting electron plasma (Langmuir) turbulence is evaluated quasi-linearly. It peaks near the wake axis. If the mass of the electrons is artificially enhanced, for example in order to make numerical simulation feasible, then much more unstable electron distributions arise; but these are caused by the unphysical mass ratio.

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APA

Hutchinson, I. H. (2012). Electron velocity distribution instability in magnetized plasma wakes and artificial electron mass. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 117(3). https://doi.org/10.1029/2011JA017119

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