Abstract Behavior of unstable plasma waves generated by the Farley‐Buneman instability (FBI) and the gradient drift instability (GDI) is analyzed in the transitional valley region near 120 km in altitude. The analysis is based on the expression for the FBI/GDI growth rateγthat has been recently generalized to include ion inertia effects for arbitrary altitude and wavelength, within the limits imposed by the fluid and local approaches. It is found that the ion inertia leads to a different instability behavior when the convection component is between the two critical values determined by the ion acoustic speedCsand the ratioribetween the ion collision and gyrofrequency. The most interesting case occurs near 120 km, just below whereri=1. From analysis of electron density gradientsG=∇n/nthat result in marginal instability conditionγ=0 (i.e., critical gradientsG0), there exists a critical scale whereG0=0 and below which all waves are unstable to FBI. Above this scale,G0>0 and gradients need to be sufficiently strongG>G0for the plasma to become unstable through GDI. There also exists a maximum in dependence, which refers to the least unstable scale and gradient. For convection outside of the specified range, no critical or least unstable scale exists, which is a typical situation outside of the transitional valley region. Overall, this analysis shows that the FBI convection thresholds and the GDI critical gradients are modified by the ion inertia and that the effects are most pronounced in the transitional valley region near 120 km.
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Simulations of Secondary Farley‐Buneman Instability Driven by a Kilometer‐Scale Primary Wave: Anomalous Transport and Formation of Flat‐Topped Electric Fields
Abstract Since the 1950s, high frequency and very high frequency radars near the magnetic equator have frequently detected strong echoes caused ultimately by the Farley‐Buneman instability (FBI) and the gradient drift instability (GDI). In the 1980s, coordinated rocket and radar campaigns made the astonishing observation of flat‐topped electric fields coincident with both meter‐scale irregularities and the passage of kilometer‐scale waves. The GDI in the daytimeEregion produces kilometer‐scale primary waves with polarization electric fields large enough to drive meter‐scale secondary FBI waves. The meter‐scale waves propagate nearly vertically along the large‐scale troughs and crests and act as VHF tracers for the large‐scale dynamics. This work presents a set of hybrid numerical simulations of secondary FBIs, driven by a primary kilometer‐scale GDI‐like wave. Meter‐scale density irregularities develop in the crest and trough of the kilometer‐scale wave, where the total electric field exceeds the FBI threshold, and propagate at an angle near the direction of total Hall drift determined by the combined electric fields. The meter‐scale irregularities transport plasma across the magnetic field, producing flat‐topped electric fields similar to those observed in rocket data and reducing the large‐scale wave electric field to just above the FBI threshold value. The self‐consistent reduction in driving electric field helps explain why echoes from the FBI propagate near the plasma acoustic speed.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1755350
- PAR ID:
- 10375120
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
- Volume:
- 124
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2169-9380
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- p. 734-748
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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