Arbitrary-order Hilbert Spectral Analysis and Intermittency in Solar Wind Density Fluctuations

The properties of inertial- and kinetic-range solar wind turbulence have been investigated with the arbitrary-order Hilbert spectral analysis method, applied to high-resolution density measurements. Due to the small sample size and to the presence of strong nonstationary behavior and large-scale str...

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Published inThe Astrophysical journal Vol. 859; no. 1; pp. 27 - 34
Main Authors Carbone, Francesco, Sorriso-Valvo, Luca, Alberti, Tommaso, Lepreti, Fabio, Chen, Christopher H. K., N me ek, Zdenek, Šafránková, Jana
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Philadelphia The American Astronomical Society 20.05.2018
IOP Publishing
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Summary:The properties of inertial- and kinetic-range solar wind turbulence have been investigated with the arbitrary-order Hilbert spectral analysis method, applied to high-resolution density measurements. Due to the small sample size and to the presence of strong nonstationary behavior and large-scale structures, the classical analysis in terms of structure functions may prove to be unsuccessful in detecting the power-law behavior in the inertial range, and may underestimate the scaling exponents. However, the Hilbert spectral method provides an optimal estimation of the scaling exponents, which have been found to be close to those for velocity fluctuations in fully developed hydrodynamic turbulence. At smaller scales, below the proton gyroscale, the system loses its intermittent multiscaling properties and converges to a monofractal process. The resulting scaling exponents, obtained at small scales, are in good agreement with those of classical fractional Brownian motion, indicating a long-term memory in the process, and the absence of correlations around the spectral-break scale. These results provide important constraints on models of kinetic-range turbulence in the solar wind.
Bibliography:AAS09035
The Sun and the Heliosphere
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/aabcc2