Study of hot flow anomalies using Cluster multi-spacecraft measurements
Gabor Facsko, Jean-Gabriel Trotignon, Iannis Dandouras, Elisabeth A., Lucek, Patrick W. Daly

TL;DR
This study utilizes Cluster multi-spacecraft data to analyze hot flow anomalies (HFAs), confirming the role of high solar wind speed in their formation and comparing observations with hybrid simulation results.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of HFAs using Cluster data and confirms the importance of solar wind speed in HFA formation, enhancing understanding of their mechanisms.
Findings
Higher solar wind speed correlates with HFA formation.
Cluster measurements yield more detailed HFA observations.
Comparison with hybrid simulations supports observational results.
Abstract
Hot flow anomalies (HFAs) were first discovered in the early 1980s at the bow shock of the Earth. In the 1990s these features were studied, observed and simulated very intensively and many new missions focused the attention to this phenomenon again. Many basic features and the HFA formation mechanism were clarified observationally and using hybrid simulation techniques. We described previous observational, theoretical and simulation results in the research field of HFAs. We introduced HFA observations performed at the Earth, Mars, Venus and Saturn in this paper. We share different observation results of space mission to give an overview to the reader. Cluster multi-spacecraft measurements gave us more observed HFA events and finer, more sophisticated methods to understand them better. In this study, HFAs were studied using observations of the Cluster magnetometer and the Cluster plasma…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Hydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
