SM13C-2506
Kinetic Structures of Quasi-Perpendicular Shocks in Global Particle-in-Cell Simulations

Monday, 14 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Ivy Bo Peng1, Stefano Markidis1, Erwin Laure1, Andreas Johlander2, Andris Vaivads2, Yuri V Khotyaintsev2, Henri Pierre3 and Giovanni Lapenta4, (1)KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, (2)IRF Swedish Institute of Space Physics Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden, (3)LPC2E-CNRS, Orléans, France, (4)Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
Abstract:
We carried out global Particle-in-Cell simulations of the interaction between the solar wind and a magnetosphere to study the kinetic collisionless physics in super-critical quasi-perpendicular shocks. After an initial simulation transient, a collisionless bow shock forms as a result of the interaction of the solar wind and a planet magnetic dipole. The shock ramp has a thickness of approximately one ion skin depth and is followed by a trailing wave train in the shock downstream. At the downstream edge of the bow shock, whistler waves propagate along the magnetic field lines and the presence of electron cyclotron waves has been identified. A small part of the solar wind ion population is specularly reflected by the shock while a larger part is deflected and heated by the shock. Solar wind ions and electrons are heated in the perpendicular directions. Ions are accelerated in the perpendicular direction in the trailing wave train region. This work is an initial effort to study the electron and ion kinetic effects developed near the bow shock in a realistic magnetic field configuration.