Magnetic field intermittency in the solar wind: PSP and SolO observations ranging from the Alfven region out to 1 AU
Nikos Sioulas, Zesen Huang, Marco Velli, Rohit Chhiber, Manuel E., Cuesta, Chen Shi, William H. Matthaeus, Riddhi Bandyopadhyay, Loukas Vlahos,, Trevor A. Bowen, Ramiz A. Qudsi, Stuart D. Bale, Christopher J. Owen, P., Louarn, A. Fedorov, Milan Maksimovic, Michael L. Stevens

TL;DR
This study uses PSP and SolO data to analyze magnetic field intermittency in the solar wind from the Alfven region to 1 AU, revealing scale-dependent evolution and the influence of plasma parameters and magnetic field orientation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the scale-dependent behavior of magnetic field intermittency and its relation to solar wind properties and Parker spiral evolution.
Findings
Intermittency increases at smaller scales with radial distance.
Highly Alfvénic intervals show lower intermittency levels.
Intermittency varies with magnetic field-flow angle and solar wind speed.
Abstract
and data are utilized to investigate magnetic field intermittency in the solar wind (SW). Small-scale intermittency is observed to radially strengthen when methods relying on higher-order moments are considered (, ), but no clear trend is observed at larger scales. However, lower-order moment-based methods (e.g., PVI) are deemed more appropriate for examining the evolution of the bulk of Coherent Structures (CSs), . Using PVI, we observe a scale-dependent evolution in the fraction of the dataset occupied by CSs, . Specifically, regardless of the SW speed, a subtle increase is found in for , in contrast to a more pronounced radial increase in CSs observed at larger scales. Intermittency is investigated in relation to plasma parameters. Though, slower SW speed intervals exhibit higher $f_{PVI…
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