Differential kinetic dynamics and heating of ions in the turbulent solar wind
F. Valentini, D. Perrone, S. Stabile, O. Pezzi, S. Servidio, R. De, Marco, F. Marcucci, R. Bruno, B. Lavraud, J. De Keyser, G. Consolini, D., Brienza, L. Sorriso-Valvo, A. Retin\`o, A. Vaivads, M. Salatti, P. Veltri

TL;DR
This study uses kinetic simulations to investigate how different ion species in the turbulent solar wind experience differential heating, revealing non-Maxwellian features and informing future space mission measurements.
Contribution
It demonstrates the differential kinetic response and heating of protons and alpha particles in turbulent solar wind conditions using a hybrid Vlasov-Maxwell model.
Findings
Significant differential heating of alpha particles compared to protons.
Heating occurs near regions of high ion vorticity and non-equilibrium.
Simulated measurements can reveal non-Maxwellian velocity distributions.
Abstract
The solar wind plasma is a fully ionized and turbulent gas ejected by the outer layers of the solar corona at very high speed, mainly composed by protons and electrons, with a small percentage of helium nuclei and a significantly lower abundance of heavier ions. Since particle collisions are practically negligible, the solar wind is typically not in a state of thermodynamic equilibrium. Such a complex system must be described through self-consistent and fully nonlinear models, taking into account its multi-species composition and turbulence. We use a kinetic hybrid Vlasov-Maxwell numerical code to reproduce the turbulent energy cascade down to ion kinetic scales, in typical conditions of the uncontaminated solar wind plasma, with the aim of exploring the differential kinetic dynamics of the dominant ion species, namely protons and alpha particles. We show that the response of different…
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