Alternative high plasma beta regimes of electron heat-flux instabilities in the solar wind
R. A. L\'opez, M. Lazar, S. M. Shaaban, S. Poedts, P. S. Moya

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive linear kinetic theory analysis of various heat flux instabilities in high beta solar wind conditions, highlighting multiple regimes and their potential roles in regulating electron heat flux.
Contribution
It offers a unified description of different electron heat flux instabilities across high beta regimes, emphasizing their coexistence and varying influence in solar wind conditions.
Findings
Multiple regimes of HFIs coexist and dominate under different conditions.
Whistler HFIs are more likely at minor drifts, with limited impact on heat flux.
Heat flux regulation may involve several HFIs acting together or sequentially.
Abstract
The heat transport in the solar wind is dominated by the suprathermal electron populations, i.e., a tenuous halo and a field-aligned beam/strahl, with high energies and antisunward drifts along the magnetic field. Their evolution may offer plausible explanations for the rapid decrease of the heat flux with the solar wind expansion, typically invoked being the self-generated instabilities, or the so-called heat flux instabilities (HFIs). The present paper provides a unified description of the full spectrum of HFIs, as prescribed by the linear kinetic theory for high beta conditions () and different relative drifts () of the suprathermals. HFIs of different nature are distinguished, i.e., electromagnetic, electrostatic or hybrid, propagating parallel or obliquely to the magnetic field, etc., as well as their regimes of interplay (co-existence) or dominance. These…
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