Modeling complex plasma instabilities in space plasmas - Three-component electron formalism of heat-flux instabilities
Dustin L. Schr\"oder, Marian Lazar, Horst Fichtner, Rodrigo A. L\'opez, and Stefaan Poedts

TL;DR
This paper models space plasma heat-flux instabilities considering all three major electron components, revealing significant differences from simpler models and highlighting complex interactions affecting heat flux regulation.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive three-component electron model for heat-flux instabilities using advanced numerical codes, improving upon prior two-component approaches.
Findings
Unstable solutions differ significantly from two-component models.
Two unstable modes, whistler and firehose, are predicted to be excited.
Core-strahl and halo-strahl drifts can trigger competing or combined instabilities.
Abstract
Despite the fact that electrons observed in situ in space plasmas have three major components-the quasi-thermal core, suprathermal halo, and strahl-the analysis of instabilities triggered by kinetic, velocity-space anisotropies (such as relative drifts and temperature anisotropy) generally considers only two. We demonstrate that realistic modeling with all three components is achievable in the present analysis focusing on heat-flux instabilities. In the absence of particle collisions, these instabilities regulate the heat flux carried mainly by suprathermal electrons. The velocity distributions were modeled according to in situ observations, with a Maxwellian core and Kappa-distributed halo and strahl. We exploited advanced numerical codes capable of solving the linear dispersion and stability properties of plasma systems with Maxwellian and Kappa distributions. The unstable solutions…
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