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Proton Temperature Anisotropy Variations in Inner Heliosphere Estimated with First Parker Solar Probe Observations

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arxiv 1912.03871 v2 pith:5CMPNTQH submitted 2019-12-09 physics.space-ph physics.plasm-ph

Proton Temperature Anisotropy Variations in Inner Heliosphere Estimated with First Parker Solar Probe Observations

classification physics.space-ph physics.plasm-ph
keywords solartemperatureanisotropywindprotonfastheatingheliosphere
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We report proton temperature anisotropy variations in the inner heliosphere with Parker Solar Probe (PSP) observations. Using a linear fitting method, we derive proton temperature anisotropy with temperatures measured by the Solar Probe Cup (SPC) from the SWEAP instrument suite and magnetic field observations from the FIELDS instrument suite. The observed radial dependence of temperature variations in the fast solar wind implies stronger perpendicular heating and parallel cooling than previous results from Helios measurements made at larger radial distances. The anti-correlation between proton temperature anisotropy and parallel plasma beta is retained in fast solar wind. However, the temperature anisotropies of the slow solar wind seem to be well constrained by the mirror and parallel firehose instabilities. The perpendicular heating of the slow solar wind inside 0.24 AU may contribute to its same trend up against mirror instability thresholds as fast solar wind. These results suggest that we may see stronger anisotropy heating than expected in inner heliosphere.

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