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Plasma instabilities in meteor trails: linear theory

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Plasma instabilities in meteor trails: linear theory. / Oppenheim, Meers M.; Dyrud, Lars P.; Ray, Licia.
In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, Vol. 108, No. A2, 1063, 02.2003.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Oppenheim, MM, Dyrud, LP & Ray, L 2003, 'Plasma instabilities in meteor trails: linear theory', Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, vol. 108, no. A2, 1063. https://doi.org/10.1029/2002JA009548

APA

Oppenheim, M. M., Dyrud, L. P., & Ray, L. (2003). Plasma instabilities in meteor trails: linear theory. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 108(A2), Article 1063. https://doi.org/10.1029/2002JA009548

Vancouver

Oppenheim MM, Dyrud LP, Ray L. Plasma instabilities in meteor trails: linear theory. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 2003 Feb;108(A2):1063. Epub 2003 Feb 6. doi: 10.1029/2002JA009548

Author

Oppenheim, Meers M. ; Dyrud, Lars P. ; Ray, Licia. / Plasma instabilities in meteor trails : linear theory. In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 2003 ; Vol. 108, No. A2.

Bibtex

@article{4801d0703bda4fb3baff274987023c49,
title = "Plasma instabilities in meteor trails: linear theory",
abstract = "Ablation of micrometeoroids between 70 and 130 km altitude in the atmosphere creates plasma columns with densities exceeding the ambient ionospheric electron density by many orders of magnitude. Density gradients at the edges of these trails can create ambipolar electric fields with amplitudes in excess of 100 mV/m. These fields combine with diamagnetic drifts to drive electrons at speeds exceeding 2 km/s. The fields and gradients also initiate Farley-Buneman and gradient-drift instabilities. These create field-aligned plasma density irregularities which evolve into turbulent structures detectable by radars with a large power-aperture product, such as those found at Jicamarca, Arecibo, and Kwajalein. This paper presents a theory of meteor trail instabilities using both fluid and kinetic methods. In particular, it discusses the origin of the driving electric field, the resulting electron drifts, and the linear plasma instabilities of meteor trails. It shows that though the ambipolar electric field changes amplitude and even direction as a function of altitude, the electrons always drift in the positive ∇n × B direction, where n is the density and B the geomagnetic field. The linear stability analysis predicts that instabilities develop within a limited range of altitudes with the following observational consequences: (1) nonspecular meteor trail echoes will be field-aligned; (2) nonspecular echoes will return from a limited range of altitudes compared with the range over which the head echo reflection indicates the presence of plasma columns; and (3) anomalous cross-field diffusion will occur only within this limited altitude range with consequences for calculating diffusion rates and temperatures with both specular and nonspecular radars.",
keywords = "Instability, Meteor, Plasma, Radar, Trail, Turbulence",
author = "Oppenheim, {Meers M.} and Dyrud, {Lars P.} and Licia Ray",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2003 American Geophysical Union",
year = "2003",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1029/2002JA009548",
language = "English",
volume = "108",
journal = "Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics",
issn = "2169-9402",
publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "A2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Plasma instabilities in meteor trails

T2 - linear theory

AU - Oppenheim, Meers M.

AU - Dyrud, Lars P.

AU - Ray, Licia

N1 - © 2003 American Geophysical Union

PY - 2003/2

Y1 - 2003/2

N2 - Ablation of micrometeoroids between 70 and 130 km altitude in the atmosphere creates plasma columns with densities exceeding the ambient ionospheric electron density by many orders of magnitude. Density gradients at the edges of these trails can create ambipolar electric fields with amplitudes in excess of 100 mV/m. These fields combine with diamagnetic drifts to drive electrons at speeds exceeding 2 km/s. The fields and gradients also initiate Farley-Buneman and gradient-drift instabilities. These create field-aligned plasma density irregularities which evolve into turbulent structures detectable by radars with a large power-aperture product, such as those found at Jicamarca, Arecibo, and Kwajalein. This paper presents a theory of meteor trail instabilities using both fluid and kinetic methods. In particular, it discusses the origin of the driving electric field, the resulting electron drifts, and the linear plasma instabilities of meteor trails. It shows that though the ambipolar electric field changes amplitude and even direction as a function of altitude, the electrons always drift in the positive ∇n × B direction, where n is the density and B the geomagnetic field. The linear stability analysis predicts that instabilities develop within a limited range of altitudes with the following observational consequences: (1) nonspecular meteor trail echoes will be field-aligned; (2) nonspecular echoes will return from a limited range of altitudes compared with the range over which the head echo reflection indicates the presence of plasma columns; and (3) anomalous cross-field diffusion will occur only within this limited altitude range with consequences for calculating diffusion rates and temperatures with both specular and nonspecular radars.

AB - Ablation of micrometeoroids between 70 and 130 km altitude in the atmosphere creates plasma columns with densities exceeding the ambient ionospheric electron density by many orders of magnitude. Density gradients at the edges of these trails can create ambipolar electric fields with amplitudes in excess of 100 mV/m. These fields combine with diamagnetic drifts to drive electrons at speeds exceeding 2 km/s. The fields and gradients also initiate Farley-Buneman and gradient-drift instabilities. These create field-aligned plasma density irregularities which evolve into turbulent structures detectable by radars with a large power-aperture product, such as those found at Jicamarca, Arecibo, and Kwajalein. This paper presents a theory of meteor trail instabilities using both fluid and kinetic methods. In particular, it discusses the origin of the driving electric field, the resulting electron drifts, and the linear plasma instabilities of meteor trails. It shows that though the ambipolar electric field changes amplitude and even direction as a function of altitude, the electrons always drift in the positive ∇n × B direction, where n is the density and B the geomagnetic field. The linear stability analysis predicts that instabilities develop within a limited range of altitudes with the following observational consequences: (1) nonspecular meteor trail echoes will be field-aligned; (2) nonspecular echoes will return from a limited range of altitudes compared with the range over which the head echo reflection indicates the presence of plasma columns; and (3) anomalous cross-field diffusion will occur only within this limited altitude range with consequences for calculating diffusion rates and temperatures with both specular and nonspecular radars.

KW - Instability

KW - Meteor

KW - Plasma

KW - Radar

KW - Trail

KW - Turbulence

U2 - 10.1029/2002JA009548

DO - 10.1029/2002JA009548

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:3242892818

VL - 108

JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics

JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics

SN - 2169-9402

IS - A2

M1 - 1063

ER -