Abstract

AbstractHot flow anomalies (HFAs) and foreshock bubbles (FBs) are significant foreshock transients that can accelerate particles and disturb the magnetosphere‐ionosphere system. Yet, their early formation mechanisms are still not fully understood. To investigate the formation of tangential discontinuity (TD)‐driven FBs and HFAs, we use 2‐D local hybrid simulations where a reflected or an injected warm foreshock ion beam can interact with a TD whose half‐thickness is comparable to the ion inertial scale. We show that the foreshock ions perform a partial gyration within, or across, the TD. Bulk motion differences between partially‐gyrating foreshock ions and fluid‐electrons lead to the generation of currents. As the trigger, these foreshock‐driven currents change the magnetic field topology around the TD and force the frozen‐in solar wind plasma to redistribute along with the field lines, shaping the foreshock transient. This confirms a recently proposed kinetic formation model. The extent of the magnetic field direction change across the TD within the foreshock ion gyromotion determines the current profile and thus the type of foreshock transient that forms. For a thin TD, the foreshock ions generate a current that is much stronger on the upstream side than the downstream side, forming an FB with one upstream compressional boundary. For the same foreshock ion gyroradius and magnetic shear, a thick TD yields comparable foreshock‐driven currents on the upstream and downstream sides, forming an HFA with two compressional boundaries. Our study suggests that the TD thickness is one of the factors that determine the formation of FBs and HFAs.

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