Abstract

The influence of gradients of number density, magnetic field, and flow velocity in a plasma on the propagation of low-frequency electrostatic waves is investigated in plasma conditions relevant for the Venusian ionosphere (vicinity of Venus terminator). For this purpose, we assume a collisionless inhomogeneous plasma model consisting of two positive ion species, hydrogen H+ and oxygen O+, as well as neutralizing electrons. Linear dispersion relations predict two types of plasma modes, namely, ion-acoustic mode and drift mode. It is found that these modes have relatively long wavelengths, extending to 10 km and frequencies on the order of ∼10−3−10−2 Hz. The characteristics of these modes show a strong dependence on the gradients of plasma parameters, and numerical analysis reveals that the coupling of these modes may lead to nonlinear instabilities. However, unstable modes occur only when the field-aligned shear flows are introduced. These results help explain the presence of low-frequency electrostatic modes and their basic features in the Venusian ionosphere, and will allow future studies to extend modeling to other planetary or even cometary conditions.

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