Proton Temperature Anisotropy Across Interplanetary Shocks: A Statistical Analysis with WIND observations
Zeping Jin, Lingling Zhao, Xingyu Zhu, Vladimir Flosinski, Gary P. Zank, Jakobus Le Roux, Yiming Jiao, Ashok Silwal, Nibuna S. M. Subashchandar
arXiv:2604.02452v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Interplanetary (IP) shocks efficiently modify the proton temperature anisotropy of the solar wind. Analyzing ~800 IP shocks observed by the Wind spacecraft from 1997-2024, we present a statistical study of upstream and downstream proton temperature anisotropy and its dependence on shock geometry, compression, and distance from the shock. We find that (1) quasi-perpendicular shocks produce a pronounced enhancement of perpendicular temperature downstream (Tperp > Tpara), whereas parallel shocks remain near isotropic downstream due to typically stronger upstream Tpara; (2) comparisons with the Chew-Goldberger-Low (CGL) double-adiabatic model reveal geometry-dependent deviations. CGL overestimates downstream perpendicular heating and underestimates parallel heating at quasi-perpendicular shocks, with the opposite trend at quasi-parallel shocks, highlighting the importance of non-adiabatic processes beyond simple compression; (3) Shock-driven anisotropy is strongly localized near the shock and gradually relaxes toward typical solar wind conditions farther downstream as the shock’s influence diminishes; and (4) downstream anisotropy is regulated by kinetic instabilities, with quasi-perpendicular shocks constrained by proton cyclotron and mirror instabilities and quasi-parallel shocks limited by the parallel firehose instability. Together, these results show that the evolution of temperature anisotropy at interplanetary shocks is controlled by shock geometry, localized processes, and instability driven regulation.arXiv:2604.02452v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Interplanetary (IP) shocks efficiently modify the proton temperature anisotropy of the solar wind. Analyzing ~800 IP shocks observed by the Wind spacecraft from 1997-2024, we present a statistical study of upstream and downstream proton temperature anisotropy and its dependence on shock geometry, compression, and distance from the shock. We find that (1) quasi-perpendicular shocks produce a pronounced enhancement of perpendicular temperature downstream (Tperp > Tpara), whereas parallel shocks remain near isotropic downstream due to typically stronger upstream Tpara; (2) comparisons with the Chew-Goldberger-Low (CGL) double-adiabatic model reveal geometry-dependent deviations. CGL overestimates downstream perpendicular heating and underestimates parallel heating at quasi-perpendicular shocks, with the opposite trend at quasi-parallel shocks, highlighting the importance of non-adiabatic processes beyond simple compression; (3) Shock-driven anisotropy is strongly localized near the shock and gradually relaxes toward typical solar wind conditions farther downstream as the shock’s influence diminishes; and (4) downstream anisotropy is regulated by kinetic instabilities, with quasi-perpendicular shocks constrained by proton cyclotron and mirror instabilities and quasi-parallel shocks limited by the parallel firehose instability. Together, these results show that the evolution of temperature anisotropy at interplanetary shocks is controlled by shock geometry, localized processes, and instability driven regulation.

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