Abstract

Abstract On 2019 April 5, while the Parker Solar Probe was at its 35 solar radius perihelion, the data set collected at 293 samples/s contained more than 10,000 examples of spiky electric-field-like structures with durations less than 200 milliseconds and amplitudes greater than 10 mV m−1. The vast majority of these events were caused by plasma turbulence. Defining dust events as those with similar, narrowly peaked, positive, and single-ended signatures resulted in finding 135 clear dust events, which, after correcting for the low detection efficiently, resulted in an estimate consistent with the 1000 dust events expected from other techniques. Defining time domain structures (TDS) as those with opposite polarity signals in the opposite antennas resulted in finding 238 clear TDS events which, after correcting for the detection efficiency, resulted in an estimated 500–1000 TDS events on this day. The TDS electric fields were bipolar, as expected for electron holes. Several events were found at times when the magnetic field was in the plane of the two measured components of the electric field such that the component of the electric field parallel to the magnetic field was measured. One example of significant parallel electric fields shows the negative potential that classified them as electron holes. Because the TDS observation rate was not uniform with time, it is likely that there were local regions below the spacecraft with field-aligned currents that generated the TDS.

Highlights

  • On April 5, 2019, while the Parker Solar Probe was at its 35 solar radius perihelion, the data set collected at 293 samples/sec contained more than 10,000 examples of spiky electric-field-like structures having durations less than 200 milliseconds and amplitudes greater than 10 mV/m

  • Double layer-type time domain structures (TDS) were first discussed in connection with magnetospheric physics and astrophysics by the Stockholm group under Hannes Alfvén [Alfven and Carlqvist, 1978, and references therein; Raadu, 1989], and they were first observed in the magnetosphere along auroral zone magnetic field lines by the S3-3 satellite [Mozer et al, 1977; Temerin et al, 1982]

  • The task in the following data analysis is to distinguish between these turbulent electric fields, those produced by dust, and those produced by TDS

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Summary

Introduction

On April 5, 2019, while the Parker Solar Probe was at its 35 solar radius perihelion, the data set collected at 293 samples/sec contained more than 10,000 examples of spiky electric-field-like structures having durations less than 200 milliseconds and amplitudes greater than 10 mV/m. Time domain structures (TDS) are several millisecond duration, intense, electron scale, electric field spikes having significant components parallel to the local magnetic field [Mozer et al, 2015; Hutchinson, 2017].

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