Proton and Helium Heating by Cascading Turbulence in a Low-beta Plasma
Zhaodong Shi, P. A. Mu\~noz, J. B\"uchner, Siming Liu

TL;DR
This study uses hybrid-kinetic simulations to explore how turbulence in a low-beta plasma preferentially heats Helium ions and protons, revealing mechanisms relevant to solar energetic particle events.
Contribution
It demonstrates the role of cascading waves and cyclotron resonances in ion heating, highlighting differences in parallel and perpendicular heating pathways for Helium ions and protons.
Findings
Significant parallel heating of Helium ions and protons due to beam formation.
Perpendicular Helium ion heating overtakes parallel heating after hundreds of proton gyro-periods.
Little proton perpendicular heating due to absence of specific wave modes.
Abstract
How ions are energized and heated is a fundamental problem in the study of energy dissipation in magnetized plasmas. In particular, the heating of heavy ions (including , and others) has been a constant concern for understanding the microphysics of impulsive solar flares. In this article, via two-dimensional hybrid-kinetic Particle-in-Cell simulations, we study the heating of Helium ions () by turbulence driven by cascading waves launched at large scales from the left-handed polarized Helium ion cyclotron wave branch of a multi-ion plasma composed of electrons, protons, and Helium ions. We find significant parallel (to the background magnetic field) heating for both Helium ions and protons due to the formation of beams and plateaus in their velocity distribution functions along the background magnetic field. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
