Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 Annual Meeting of the APS Mid-Atlantic Section
Friday–Sunday, November 15–17, 2024; Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Session D02: Astrophysics I
11:00 AM–12:36 PM,
Saturday, November 16, 2024
Temple University
Room: SERC 110B
Chair: Anish Agashe, St. Mary's College of Maryland
Abstract: D02.00004 : 1/f Noise in the Heliosphere: a Target for PUNCH Science*
12:00 PM–12:12 PM
Presenter:
Jiaming Wang
(University of Delaware)
Authors:
Jiaming Wang
(University of Delaware)
William Henry Matthaeus
(University of Delaware)
Rohit Chhiber
(University of Delaware)
Sohom Roy
(University of Delaware)
Rayta Pradata
(University of Delaware)
Francesco Pecora
(University of Delaware)
Yan Yang
(University of Delaware)
One compelling mechanism for the generation of 1/f noise is the superposition principle, where a composite 1/f spectrum arises from the superposition of a collection of individual power-law spectra characterized by scale-invariant correlation times [2, 3]. In the context of the solar wind, such a superposition could originate from scale-invariant reconnection processes in the corona [1, 4]. Further observations [4, 5] have detected 1/f signatures in the photosphere and corona at frequency ranges compatible with those observed at 1 au, suggesting an even lower altitude origin of 1/f spectrum in the solar dynamo itself. This hypothesis is bolstered by dynamo experiments [6] and simulations [7] that indicate inverse cascade activities, which can be linked to successive flux tube reconnections beneath the corona, and are known to generate 1/f noise possibly through nonlocal interactions at the largest scales. Conversely, models positing in situ generation of 1/f signals face causality issues in explaining the low-frequency portion of the 1/f spectrum. Understanding 1/f noise in the solar wind may inform central problems in heliospheric physics, such as the solar dynamo, coronal heating, the origin of the solar wind, and the nature of interplanetary turbulence.
[1] Matthaeus, W. H. & Goldstein, M. L. 1986, PhRvL, 57, 495
[2] Machlup, S. 1981, in Sixth International Conference on Noise in Physical Systems,157–160
[3] Montroll, E. W. & Shlesinger, M. F. 1982, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, 79, 3380
[4] Matthaeus et al. 2007, ApJL, 657, L121
[5] Nakagawa, Y. & Levine, R. H. 1974, ApJ, 190, 441
[6] Bourgoin et al. 2002, Physics of Fluids, 14, 3046
[7] Ponty et al. 2004, PhRvL, 92, 144503
*This research is partially supported by the NASA LWS grants 80NSSC20K0377 (subcontract 655-001) and 80NSSC22K1020, by the NASA IMAP project at UD under subcontract SUB0000317 from Princeton University, by the NASA/SWRI PUNCH subcontract N99054DS at the University of Delaware, by the NASA HSR grant 80NSSC18K1648, and by National Science Foundation grant AGS-2108834.
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