A two-fluid solar-wind model with intermittent Alfvénic turbulence

Benjamin Divakar Giles Chandran, Toby Adkins, Stuart D. Bale, Vincent David, Jasper Halekas, Kristopher Klein, Romain Meyrand, Jean C. Perez, Munehito Shoda, Jonathan Squire, Evan Lowell Yerger

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    In one of the leading theories for the origin of the solar wind, photospheric motions launch Alfvén waves (AWs) that propagate along open magnetic-field lines through the solar atmosphere and into the solar wind. The radial variation in the Alfvén speed causes some of the AWs to reflect, and counter-propagating AWs subsequently interact to produce Alfveńic turbulence, in which AW energy cascades from long wavelengths to short wavelengths and dissipates, heating the plasma. In this paper we develop a one-dimensional two-fluid solar-wind model that includes Alfvénic turbulence, proton temperature anisotropy and a novel method for apportioning the turbulent heating rate between parallel proton heating, perpendicular proton heating and electron heating. We employ a turbulence model that accounts for recent observations from NASA’s Parker Solar Probe, which find that AW fluctuations in the near-Sun solar wind are intermittent and less anisotropic than in previous models of anisotropic magnetohydrodynamic turbulence. Our solar-wind model reproduces a wide range of remote observations of the corona and in-situ measurements of the solar wind, and our turbulent heating model consists of analytic equations that could be usefully incorporated into other solar-wind models and numerical models of more distant astrophysical plasmas.

    Original languageEnglish (US)
    Article numberE125
    JournalJournal of Plasma Physics
    Volume91
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Aug 26 2025

    All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

    • Condensed Matter Physics

    Keywords

    • astrophysical plasmas
    • plasma nonlinear phenomena
    • space plasma physics

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