Coronal ion-cyclotron beam instabilities within the multi-fluid description
R. Mecheri, E. Marsch (Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research)

TL;DR
This study investigates how ion beams in the solar corona can generate ion-cyclotron waves through micro-instabilities, using a multi-fluid model to better understand coronal heating and acceleration mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a multi-fluid model that accounts for ion-cyclotron effects and analyzes ion-beam driven instabilities in coronal holes with realistic plasma conditions.
Findings
Ion beams can drive micro-instabilities via resonant ion-cyclotron excitation.
The model shows wave growth consistent with observed coronal phenomena.
Ion beam-driven instabilities may contribute to coronal heating.
Abstract
Spectroscopic observations and theoretical models suggest resonant wave-particle interactions, involving high-frequency ion-cyclotron waves, as the principal mechanism for heating and accelerating ions in the open coronal holes. However, the mechanism responsible for the generation of the ion-cyclotron waves remains unclear. One possible scenario is that ion beams originating from small-scale reconnection events can drive micro-instabilities that constitute a possible source for the excitation of ion-cyclotron waves. In order to study ion beam-driven electromagnetic instabilities, the multi-fluid model in the low-beta coronal plasma is used. While neglecting the electron inertia this model allows one to take into account ion-cyclotron wave effects that are absent from the one-fluid MHD model. Realistic models of density and temperature as well as a 2-D analytical magnetic field model…
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