Multi-Beam Energy Moments of Compound Measured Ion Velocity Distributions
Martin V. Goldman, David. L. Newman, Jonathan P. Eastwood, Giovanni, Lapenta, James L. Burch, Barbara Giles

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel multi-beam approach to analyze ion velocity distributions in space plasmas, providing more accurate energy moments and insights than traditional single-beam methods.
Contribution
It develops three methods for decomposing complex ion distributions into multiple beams and calculates their energy moments, improving plasma analysis accuracy.
Findings
Multi-beam moments avoid pseudo-thermal energy artifacts.
Methods applied to MMS data and simulations show enhanced plasma property insights.
Multi-beam analysis reveals detailed plasma dynamics during reconnection.
Abstract
Compound ion distributions, fi(v), have been measured by NASA's Magnetospheric Multi-Scale Mission (MMS) and have been found in reconnection simulations. A complex distribution, fi(v), consisting, for example, of essentially disjoint pieces will be called a multi-beam distribution and modeled as a sum of "beams," fi(v) = f1(v) + ... +fN(v). Velocity moments of fi(v) are taken beam by beam and summed. Such multi-beam moments of fi(v) have advantages over the customary standard velocity moments of fi(v), forwhich there is only one mean flow velocity. For example, the standard thermal energy momentof a pair of equal and opposite cold particle beams is non-zero even though each beam has zero thermal energy. We therefore call this thermal energy pseudo-thermal. By contrast, a multi-beam moment of two or more beams has no pseudo-thermal energy. We develop three different ways of decomposing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
