Alfvén wave explained

In plasma physics, an Alfvén wave, named after Hannes Alfvén, is a type of plasma wave in which ions oscillate in response to a restoring force provided by an effective tension on the magnetic field lines.[1]

Definition

An Alfvén wave is a low-frequency (compared to the ion gyrofrequency) travelling oscillation of the ions and magnetic field in a plasma. The ion mass density provides the inertia and the magnetic field line tension provides the restoring force. Alfvén waves propagate in the direction of the magnetic field, and the motion of the ions and the perturbation of the magnetic field are transverse to the direction of propagation. However, Alfvén waves existing at oblique incidences will smoothly change into magnetosonic waves when the propagation is perpendicular to the magnetic field.

Alfvén waves are dispersionless.

Alfvén velocity

\varepsilon

of a magnetized plasma is given by[2] \varepsilon = 1 + \fracwhere is the magnetic flux density,

c

is the speed of light,

\mu0

is the permeability of the vacuum, and the mass density is the sum \rho = \sum_s n_s m_s,over all species of charged plasma particles (electrons as well as all types of ions).Here species s has number density n_sand mass per particle m_s.

The phase velocity of an electromagnetic wave in such a medium is v = \frac = \fracFor the case of an Alfvén wave v = \fracwhere v_A \equiv \fracis the Alfvén wave group velocity.(The formula for the phase velocity assumes that the plasma particles are moving at non-relativistic speeds, the mass-weighted particle velocity is zero in the frame of reference, and the wave is propagating parallel to the magnetic field vector.)

If

vA\llc

, then

vvA

. On the other hand, when

vA\toinfty

,

v\toc

. That is, at high field or low density, the group velocity of the Alfvén wave approaches the speed of light, and the Alfvén wave becomes an ordinary electromagnetic wave.

Neglecting the contribution of the electrons to the mass density,

\rho=nimi

, where

ni

is the ion number density and

mi

is the mean ion mass per particle, so thatv_A \approx \left(2.18 \times 10^\,\text\,\text^\right) \left(\frac\right)^ \left(\frac\right)^ \left(\frac\right).

Alfvén time

In plasma physics, the Alfvén time

\tauA

is an important timescale for wave phenomena. It is related to the Alfvén velocity by:\tau_A = \fracwhere

a

denotes the characteristic scale of the system. For example,

a

could be the minor radius of the torus in a tokamak.

Relativistic case

The Alfvén wave velocity in relativistic magnetohydrodynamics is[3] v = \fracwhere is the total energy density of plasma particles,

P

is the total plasma pressure, and P_m = \fracis the magnetic pressure. In the non-relativistic limit, where

P\lle\rhoc2

, this formula reduces to the one given previously.

History

The coronal heating problem

The study of Alfvén waves began from the coronal heating problem, a longstanding question in heliophysics. It was unclear why the temperature of the solar corona is hot (about one million kelvins) compared to its surface (the photosphere), which is only a few thousand kelvins. Intuitively, it would make sense to see a decrease in temperature when moving away from a heat source, but this does not seem to be the case even though the photosphere is denser and would generate more heat than the corona.

In 1942, Hannes Alfvén proposed in Nature the existence of an electromagnetic-hydrodynamic wave which would carry energy from the photosphere to heat up the corona and the solar wind. He claimed that the sun had all the necessary criteria to support these waves and they may in turn be responsible for sun spots. He stated:

If a conducting liquid is placed in a constant magnetic field, every motion of the liquid gives rise to an E.M.F. which produces electric currents. Owing to the magnetic field, these currents give mechanical forces which change the state of motion of the liquid. Thus a kind of combined electromagnetic–hydrodynamic wave is produced.[4]

This would eventually turn out to be Alfvén waves. He received the 1970 Nobel Prize in Physics for this discovery.

Experimental studies and observations

The convection zone of the sun, the region beneath the photosphere in which energy is transported primarily by convection, is sensitive to the motion of the core due to the rotation of the sun. Together with varying pressure gradients beneath the surface, electromagnetic fluctuations produced in the convection zone induce random motion on the photospheric surface and produce Alfvén waves. The waves then leave the surface, travel through the chromosphere and transition zone, and interact with the ionized plasma. The wave itself carries energy and some of the electrically charged plasma.

In the early 1990s, de Pontieu[5] and Haerendel[6] suggested that Alfvén waves may also be associated with the plasma jets known as spicules. It was theorized these brief spurts of superheated gas were carried by the combined energy and momentum of their own upward velocity, as well as the oscillating transverse motion of the Alfvén waves.

In 2007, Alfvén waves were reportedly observed for the first time traveling towards the corona by Tomczyk et al., but their predictions could not conclude that the energy carried by the Alfvén waves was sufficient to heat the corona to its enormous temperatures, for the observed amplitudes of the waves were not high enough.[7] However, in 2011, McIntosh et al. reported the observation of highly energetic Alfvén waves combined with energetic spicules which could sustain heating the corona to its million-kelvin temperature. These observed amplitudes (20.0 km/s against 2007's observed 0.5 km/s) contained over one hundred times more energy than the ones observed in 2007.[8] The short period of the waves also allowed more energy transfer into the coronal atmosphere. The 50,000 km-long spicules may also play a part in accelerating the solar wind past the corona.[9] Alfvén waves are routinely observed in solar wind, in particular in fast solar wind streams. The role of Alfvénic oscillations in the interaction between fast solar wind and the Earth's magnetosphere is currently under debate.[10] [11]

However, the above-mentioned discoveries of Alfvén waves in the complex Sun's atmosphere, starting from the Hinode era in 2007 for the next 10 years, mostly fall in the realm of Alfvénic waves essentially generated as a mixed mode due to transverse structuring of the magnetic and plasma properties in the localized flux tubes. In 2009, Jess et al. reported the periodic variation of H-alpha line-width as observed by Swedish Solar Telescope (SST) above chromospheric bright-points. They claimed first direct detection of the long-period (126–700 s), incompressible, torsional Alfvén waves in the lower solar atmosphere.

After the seminal work of Jess et al. (2009), in 2017 Srivastava et al. detected the existence of high-frequency torsional Alfvén waves in the Sun's chromospheric fine-structured flux tubes. They discovered that these high-frequency waves carry substantial energy capable of heating the Sun's corona and also in originating the supersonic solar wind. In 2018, using spectral imaging observations, non-LTE (local thermodynamic equilibrium) inversions and magnetic field extrapolations of sunspot atmospheres, Grant et al. found evidence for elliptically polarized Alfvén waves forming fast-mode shocks in the outer regions of the chromospheric umbral atmosphere. They provided quantification of the degree of physical heat provided by the dissipation of such Alfvén wave modes above active region spots.

Historical timeline

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Iwai, K; Shinya, K,; Takashi, K. and Moreau, R. (2003) "Pressure change accompanying Alfvén waves in a liquid metal" Magnetohydrodynamics 39(3): pp. 245-250, page 245
  2. Book: Chen, F.F. . 2016 . Introduction to Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion . 3rd . Springer International Publishing . Switzerland . 55, 126–131.
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  4. Hannes . Alfvén . 1942 . Existence of electromagnetic–hydrodynamic waves . Nature . 150 . 3805 . 405–406 . 1942Natur.150..405A . 10.1038/150405d0 . 4072220.
  5. Web site: Chromospheric Spicules driven by Alfvén waves . https://web.archive.org/web/20020716063013/http://www.mpe.mpg.de/Highlights/FB1997/h97-10-02.html . dead . 16 July 2002 . Bart de Pontieu . Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik . 18 December 1997 . 1 April 2012 .
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