We examine the applicability of homogeneous, negligible cross-helicity magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence models incorporating “critical balance” (CB) and “scale-dependent dynamic alignment” (SDDA) to Parker Solar Probe observations of a highly Alfvénic, high cross-helicity solar wind stream. At energy-injection scales, both Alfvénic modes satisfy ± ±A/ ±nl 1, where ±Aand ±nl denote the linear and nonlinear timescales. The outward cascade remains weak, + 0.2, across all scales, while the inward cascade reaches CB at the onset of the inertial range (1), yet with spectral scalings that depart from the canonical weak-to-strong transition. Within the domain conventionally designated as the inertial range, we identify two statistically distinct subranges. At larger scales (R2; 200–6000, di), the average eddy displays a field-aligned, tube-like morphology. An inverse correlation is observed between alignment angle and gradient intensity, and the conditional structure-function exponents ζn—measured perpendicular to both the local mean field and fluctuation direction—agree with the predictions of B. D. G. Chandran et al. and A. Mallet & A. A. Schekochihin, although the parallel and displacement components show more concave scaling than anticipated. At smaller scales (R1; 10–100, di), spectra steepen, eddies become ribbon-like, and intermittency weakens. Within a narrow interval near the ion characteristic scales, eddies approach isotropy before the trend of increasing anisotropy resumes at smaller scales. Analysis using five-point increments further demonstrates a stronger multifractal character at kinetic scales than is resolved with conventional two-point methods. Finally, we discuss the influence of solar wind expansion, finite cross helicity, “anomalous coherence,” and the emergence of a “helicity barrier” in modifying CB/SDDA phenomenology and shaping the statistical properties of solar wind turbulence.
Higher-order Analysis of Three-dimensional Anisotropy in Imbalanced Alfvénic Turbulence
Sorriso Valvo L.;
2025
Abstract
We examine the applicability of homogeneous, negligible cross-helicity magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence models incorporating “critical balance” (CB) and “scale-dependent dynamic alignment” (SDDA) to Parker Solar Probe observations of a highly Alfvénic, high cross-helicity solar wind stream. At energy-injection scales, both Alfvénic modes satisfy ± ±A/ ±nl 1, where ±Aand ±nl denote the linear and nonlinear timescales. The outward cascade remains weak, + 0.2, across all scales, while the inward cascade reaches CB at the onset of the inertial range (1), yet with spectral scalings that depart from the canonical weak-to-strong transition. Within the domain conventionally designated as the inertial range, we identify two statistically distinct subranges. At larger scales (R2; 200–6000, di), the average eddy displays a field-aligned, tube-like morphology. An inverse correlation is observed between alignment angle and gradient intensity, and the conditional structure-function exponents ζn—measured perpendicular to both the local mean field and fluctuation direction—agree with the predictions of B. D. G. Chandran et al. and A. Mallet & A. A. Schekochihin, although the parallel and displacement components show more concave scaling than anticipated. At smaller scales (R1; 10–100, di), spectra steepen, eddies become ribbon-like, and intermittency weakens. Within a narrow interval near the ion characteristic scales, eddies approach isotropy before the trend of increasing anisotropy resumes at smaller scales. Analysis using five-point increments further demonstrates a stronger multifractal character at kinetic scales than is resolved with conventional two-point methods. Finally, we discuss the influence of solar wind expansion, finite cross helicity, “anomalous coherence,” and the emergence of a “helicity barrier” in modifying CB/SDDA phenomenology and shaping the statistical properties of solar wind turbulence.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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