Nonlinear Interactions in Spherically Polarized Alfv\'enic Turbulence
Abstract
Turbulent magnetic field fluctuations observed in the solar wind often maintain a constant magnitude condition accompanied by spherically polarized velocity fluctuations; these signatures are characteristic of large-amplitude Alfv\'en waves. Nonlinear energy transfer in Alfv\'enic turbulence is typically considered in the small-amplitude limit where the constant magnitude condition may be neglected; in contrast, nonlinear energy transfer in the large-amplitude limit remains relatively unstudied. We develop a method to analyze finite-amplitude turbulence through studying fluctuations as constant magnitude rotations in the stationary wave (de Hoffmann-Teller) frame, which reveals that signatures of finite-amplitude effects exist deep into the MHD range. While the dominant fluctuations are consistent with spherically-polarized large-amplitude Alfv\'en waves, the subdominant mode is relatively compressible. Signatures of nonlinear interaction between the finite-amplitude spherically polarized mode with the subdominant population reveal highly aligned transverse components. In theoretical models of Alfv\'enic turbulence, alignment is thought to reduce nonlinearity; our observations require that alignment is sufficient to either reduce shear nonlinearity such that non-Alfv\'enic interactions may be responsible for energy transfer in spherically polarized states, or that counter-propagating fluctuations maintain anomalous coherence, which is a predicted signature of reflection-driven turbulence.
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