Shear-Driven Transition to Isotropically Turbulent Solar Wind Outside the Alfven Critical Zone
D. Ruffolo, W. H. Matthaeus, R. Chhiber, A. V. Usmanov, Y. Yang, R., Bandyopadhyay, T. N. Parashar, M. L. Goldstein, C. E. DeForest, M. Wan, A., Chasapis, B. A. Maruca, M. Velli, J. C. Kasper

TL;DR
This paper proposes that shear-driven turbulence just outside the Alfvén critical zone in the solar wind explains observed features like magnetic switchbacks and large transverse velocities, supported by simulations and observations.
Contribution
It introduces a shear-driven turbulence mechanism triggered above the Alfvén critical zone, explaining solar wind features observed by Parker Solar Probe with supporting simulations.
Findings
Shear-driven turbulence accounts for magnetic switchbacks.
Large transverse velocities saturate near the Alfvén speed.
Simulation reproduces observed fluctuation distributions.
Abstract
Motivated by prior remote observations of a transition from striated solar coronal structures to more isotropic ``flocculated'' fluctuations, we propose that the dynamics of the inner solar wind just outside the Alfv\'en critical zone, and in the vicinity of the first surface, is powered by the relative velocities of adjacent coronal magnetic flux tubes. We suggest that large amplitude flow contrasts are magnetically constrained at lower altitude but shear-driven dynamics are triggered as such constraints are released above the Alfv\'en critical zone, as suggested by global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations that include self-consistent turbulence transport. We argue that this dynamical evolution accounts for features observed by {\it Parker Solar Probe} ({\it PSP}) near initial perihelia, including magnetic ``switchbacks'', and large transverse velocities that are…
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