Statistics – Applications
Scientific paper
Mar 2010
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2010aipc.1216..502m&link_type=abstract
TWELFTH INTERNATIONAL SOLAR WIND CONFERENCE. AIP Conference Proceedings, Volume 1216, pp. 502-505 (2010).
Statistics
Applications
2
Solar Wind, Dusty Plasmas, Magnetic Field Effects, Spacecraft, Particle Emission, Solar Wind, Dusty Or Complex Plasmas, Plasma Crystals, Electric And Magnetic Fields, Solar Magnetism, Spacecraft/Atmosphere Interactions
Scientific paper
Dust grains in the nanometer range bridge the gap between atoms and larger grains made of bulk material. Their small size embodies them with special properties. Due to their high relative surface area, they have a high charge-to-mass ratio, so that the Lorentz force in the solar wind magnetic field exceeds the gravitational force and other forces by a large amount, and they are accelerated to a speed of the order of magnitude of the solar wind speed. When such fast nanoparticles impact a spacecraft, they produce craters whose matter vaporises and ionises, yielding transient voltages as high as do much larger grains of smaller speed. These properties are at the origin of their recent detection at 1 AU in the solar wind. We discuss the detection of fast nanoparticles by wave instruments of different configurations, with applications to the recent detections on STEREO/WAVES and CASSINI/RPWS. Finally we discuss the opportunities for nanoparticle detection by wave instruments on future missions and/or projects in the inner heliosphere such as Bepi-Colombo and Solar Orbiter.
Bale Stuart D.
Cyr Chris St. O.
Czechowski Andrzej
Goetz Keith
Kaiser Michael L.
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