Regulation of Proton-α Differential Flow by Compressive Fluctuations and Ion-scale Instabilities in the Solar Wind
Abstract
Large-scale compressive slow-mode-like fluctuations can cause variations in the density, temperature, and magnetic-field magnitude in the solar wind. In addition, they also lead to fluctuations in the differential flow U pα between α-particles and protons (p), which is a common source of free energy for the driving of ion-scale instabilities. If the amplitude of the compressive fluctuations is sufficiently large, the fluctuating U pα intermittently drives the plasma across the instability threshold, leading to the excitation of ion-scale instabilities and thus the growth of corresponding ion-scale waves. The unstable waves scatter particles and reduce the average value of U pα. We propose that this "fluctuating-beam effect" maintains the average value of U pα well below the marginal instability threshold. We model the large-scale compressive fluctuations in the solar wind as long-wavelength slow-mode waves using a multi-fluid model. We numerically quantify the fluctuating-beam effect for the Alfv\'en/ion-cyclotron (A/IC) and fast-magnetosonic/whistler (FM/W) instabilities. We show that measurements of the proton-α differential flow and compressive fluctuations from the Wind spacecraft are consistent with our predictions for the fluctuating-beam effect. This effect creates a new channel for a direct cross-scale energy transfer from large-scale compressions to ion-scale fluctuations.
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