Parametric instability in the solar wind: numerical study of the nonlinear evolution Leonardo Primavera † , Francesco Malara † and Pierluigi Veltri † Dipartimento di Fisica, Università della Calabria, 87036 Rende (CS), Italy † Istituto Nazionale per la Fisica della Materia, Unità di Cosenza, via P. Bucci, 87036 Rende (CS), Italy Abstract. A possible mechanism to explain the decrease of the Alfvenic correlation with the distance from the sun, observed in fast speed streams in the solar wind, is the parametric instability. Starting from a circularly polarized Alfven wave, this instability naturally produces backward propagating waves and compressive fluctuations, by destroying the initial correlation of the wave. However, the applicability of this mechanism to the solar wind is debatable, since it works better when the plasma beta is much lower than 1 and the initial wave is monochromatic. To elucidate better this phenomenon, we numerically simulated the propagation of a turbulent spectrum of Alfven waves on a uniform background magnetic field by using a pseudo-spectral, one dimensional, MHD code. We used values of the plasma beta about one and very high values of the physical diffusivities, by using "artificial" numerical diffusivities to ensure the stability of the numerical scheme. We found that, even under such conditions, the initial alfvenic correlation of the waves is progressively destroyed. At the saturation of the instability, the forward and inward propagating waves have comparable energies in the spectra, at the larger scales, while the forward propagating fluctuations dominate the spectrum at smaller scales. The two spectra tend to approach each to the other at subsequent times. A tentative comparison of these results with the observations of the alfven waves present in the solar wind was carried out, with good qualitative agreement. INTRODUCTION The turbulence present in the high latitude solar wind shows very striking Alfvénic characteristics, with high correlation between velocity and magnetic field fluctuations and relatively low level of density perturbations. However, several observations ([1, 2, 3, 4]) also showed that the Alfvénicity of the fluctuations depends on the distance from the sun. By using the Elsässer notation: Z v b ρ , the outward propagating waves can be identified with Z modes, and the ones travelling in the opposite direction with Z . Then we define the pseudo-energies associated with the Elsässer variables: 1 e Z 2 , and the normalized cross helicity of 2 the fluctuations: e e σc e e where the symbol: identifies running averages on a given time scale. Under these assumptions, the radial evolution of the Alfvénicity in the solar wind can be summarized as follows: a) close to the sun, at a distance of about 0.3 AU, the hourly average cross helicity σ c has a value close to 1, meaning that the fluctuations are almost pure Z (namely outward propagating) fluctuations; b) with increasing distance from the sun, σ c decreases, because the pseudo-energies e both decrease; c) however, the decrease rate for e is faster than that for e , up to a distance of 2 5AU; d) after that distance, the two quantities lower at the same rate. This behaviour is clearly displayed in fig. 1, where the evolution of the quantity E e e , i.e. the ratio between the hourly averaged energies of Z over Z , is shown. Since e decreases faster than e , according to the point c) above, the ratio increases up to 1 5AU, then it stays approximately on the same level, since e and e decrease in the same way. Moreover, the fluctuations show a strong intermittent character, as shown from the analysis of the flatness of the fluctuations carried out by Bruno et al.(2002), in these proceedings ([5]). They showed that in the fast polar wind, the flatness of both velocity and magnetic field intensities increases, so they become more and more intermittent with decreasing the length scale, and in general, the intermittency attains higher and higher values as the distance from the sun increases. It was conjectured by several authors that in the high latitude wind, where the medium is more homogeneous, the radial evolution of the quantities can be influenced by the parametric instability ([6, 7, 8, 11]). In fact, the parametric decay process of a circularly polarized Alfvénwave (for example a Z mode) leads to the growth of a forward propagating sound wave, and a backscattered Alfvén wave with a correlation opposite to that of the mother wave (a Z mode), thus producing a decrease of CP679, Solar Wind Ten: Proceedings of the Tenth International Solar Wind Conference, edited by M. Velli, R. Bruno, and F. Malara © 2003 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0148-9/03/$20.00 505 NUMERICAL MODEL We solved numerically the fully compressible, nonlinear, MHD equations in a one-dimensional configuration. We used a pseudospectral numerical code, with periodicity boundary conditions in the spatial domain x 0 2π . Further details about the numerical technique can be found elsewhere [7]. The code calculates the time evolution of the density, the velocity, the magnetic field and the temperature, starting from a given initial condition. The above quantities are normalized to characteristic values and the unit time is the Alfvén time. We neglect viscosity and resistivity in the code, although we use hyperviscosity and hyper-resistivity in order to ensure numerical stability. The initial condition consists of a broad-band, large amplitude Alfvén wave, polarized in the yz plane, propagating on a uniform background magnetic field b0 . The total field is chosen to have uniform intensity everywhere: b ê b cos φ x ê sin φ x ê (1) Here b 0 5 is the ratio between the amplitude of the mother wave and the background magnetic field b 1. The function φ x represents the phase of the pump FIGURE 1. Radial evolution of the hourly average for the Alfvénratio e e in the solar wind. bx0 0 x y 1 z 1 0 the initial correlation. The parametric instability has been studied both numerically and analitically in several situations. Recently, Del Zanna et al. ([9, 10]) studied numerically the evolution of a monochromatic Alfvénwave in a fully three dimensional, compressible situation, subject to the parametric instability, by studying its fully nonlinear evolution and saturated state. One important result of them is that the instability is a robust process, namely it works practically in the same way independently of the dimensionality of the problem. However, in order to understand the importance of such a mechanism for the solar wind, one has to look at what happens when the initial wave is non monochromatic, but it has an extended spectrum, as it happens in the solar wind. Malara et al. ([11]) studied the evolution of the parametric instability when the initial wave has a broad band spectrum. They found that, when the plasma β 1, the time evolution of the spectra of Z and Z has several common characteristics with the evolution of the spectra with distance, observed in the solar wind ([4, 12, 13]). In this paper we want to try to understand whether the parametric instability maight account for the observed behaviour of the e e ratio with the radial distance and for the cited high intermittent behaviour found for the fluctuations in the solar wind. This possibility has been pointed out in these proceedings by Bavassano ([14]) and Del Zanna et al. ([15]). wave. Its form determines the spectrum of the initial wave. Measures by Helios spacecraft in fast streams 0 3 AU (the closest available disat distances r tance) show that fluctuations are dominated by outwardpropagating Alfvén waves, with a double-slope spectrum: at frequencies f f 0 , with f 0 3-5 10 4 Hz, the spectrum is flatter (slope 1), while at frequencies f f0 the spectrum is steeper (slope 15 2 ) [12]). In our model the phase φ x has been chosen so that the initial fluctuations have also an approximately double-slope spectrum, though the slopes are steeper than the measured values. The frequency f 0 corresponds in the model to the wavenumber k 0 60. The initial wave being Alfvénic, the velocity field is given by: cA0 vx0 δb x 0 (2) b0 where cA0 1 is the Alfvén speed and the δ operator indicates the fluctuating part of quantity f : δ f f f , f being the spatial average of f . The initial density ρ x0 1 and temperature T x 0 T0 are uniform. The value T0 is used to fix the initial plasma β , defined by β γa T0 cA0 , with γa 5 3 the adiabatic index. In the simulations we used β 1, which is of the order of the value measured in the high-latitude solar wind. The above-described configuration is an exact solution of the ideal MHD equations, which would propagate undistorted in the limit of a vanishing dissipation. An initial noise of amplitude 10 3 is added to the density to trigger the instability. 506 0.15 Rx 0.1 0.05 0.0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 t FIGURE 2. R∆x as a function of t, for various values of ∆x. COMPARISON WITH THE OBSERVATIONS Our aim is to compare the results of our numerical simulations with the solar wind data. The plot in fig. 1 represents the spatial evolution of the ratio E e e of the hourly averaged pseudo-energies of the inward and outward propagating fluctuations. In our simulations, the evolution with time emulates the change of the quantities with distance from the sun, whilst the initial broad band spectrum of the waves mimics the fluctuations present in the quantities measured in the solar wind during its transit in front of the spacecraft. In fig. 2 we plotted the ratio R∆x t e∆x t e∆x t between pseudoenergies, calculated at a given spatial scale ∆x, corresponding to a characteristic wavenumeber k 2π ∆x. We show the behaviour of the ratio R ∆x as a function of t, for different values of ∆x 1 0 0 314 0 1 0 03, corresponding to the wavenumbers k 6 20 60 100. R∆x t is initially very small, the initial velocity and magnetic field being highly correlated. With increasing time, the instability tends to reduce the Alfvénic correlation and R∆x t increases at all scales ∆x. This growth stops at time tsat 90-100, corresponding to the instability saturation. For subsequent times, the ratio R ∆x t remains almost constant or it oscillates around a final average value that increases as the averaging length scale decreases. In order to try a comparison between these results and measures in the high-latitude solar wind, we consider the ratio e e , which has been calculated by [8], shown in fig. 1, for fluctuations averaged on a time basis of 1 hour, obtained from Ulysses measures. In order to establish a corrispondence between frequencies measured in the solar wind and wavevectors in the numerical model, we assume that the frequency f 0 5 10 4 Hz 1 h 1 , where the slope of the e spectrum changes, at r 0 29 AU, corresponds to the wavenumber k 0 60; the behavior of R ∆x t for k 60 is among those plotted in Figure 2. However, the saturation value of the ratio ff xx ll ff xx 4 Ff l 2 (3) 1. the flatness for both the velocity and magnetic field has a value of 3 at large scales l (that indicates a Gaussian distribution of the strongest gradients of the fluctuations), while it increases for decreasing the length scale l, pointing out that intermittency dominates the turbulence at small scales; 2. the flatness for the magnetic field intensity is higher than the corresponding values at the same scale l for the velocity field, demonstrating that the magnetic field is in general “more intermittent” than velocity; 3. the flatness increases when the distance from the sun increases, meaning that the fluctuations become more and more intermittent during the travel in the heliosphere. In fig.s 3 and 4 we show the plots of the flatness, defined as in (3), for several length scales l, ranging from the highest (the one of the numerical box), down to the smallest length scales available in the simulation, at several times. We recall that time evolution in the simulation is analogous to evolution with distance in the observational data. A look at the result shows a striking analogy between the results of the simulations and the observation by Bruno et al. (2002) [5]. In particular, we point out that: a) the flatness increases with decreasing the length scale (see point 1 above), b) the flatness increases with increasing time, likewise it does with distance from the sun in the data. However, we point out that the final values of the flatness are much higher in our simulation than in the data. Moreover, the magnetic field in our simula- 2 They showed that: e e shown in fig. 1 is slightly higher (e e 0 5) with respect to the one obtained in our simulations for the corresponding length scale (e e 0 1 for ∆x 0 1). Nevertheless, we stress that, in spite of the crudeness of the extimations made for evaluating the length scale in the initial spectrum of the waves, the magnitude order of the values are in fairly good agreement. We conclude that, even from a quantitative point of view, the behavior of e e found in the solar wind is partially reproduced by the numerical model. Finally we remark that the evolution of the instability produces shock waves that, in turn, give rise to an intermittent behaviour for the intensity and direction of the fluctuating fields, due to the presence of strong gradients in those quantities. Bruno et al. (2002), analyzed the behaviour of the flatness of the velocity and magnetic field fluctuations observed in the solar wind at several distances from the sun. The flatness at a length scale l, for a generic quantity f (the intensity of the velocity or magnetic field fluctuations), is defined as: x=1.0 x=0.314 x=0.1 x=0.03 507 REFERENCES tions does not appear to be more intermittent than the velocity field, as found in the data (see point 2 above). We conclude that the agreement of the values found in the simulations with the observational data is only qualitative, then our simplified model does not account for all the characteristic features of the polar wind. Some ingredient is missing, such as the expansion of the wind and the three-dimensionality of the problem. Further investigation in these directions are necessary to draw a conclusion. 1. 2. 3. 4. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 5. The authors are grateful to B. Bavassano, P. Pietropaolo, R. Bruno and R. 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