Abstract
The unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution of the sixty-four dual
electron and ion spectrometers comprising the Fast Plasma Investigation
(FPI) onboard the four Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft
enables us to compute terms of the Vlasov equation and thus compare MMS
measurements directly to kinetic theory. Here we discuss our techniques
for determining spatial and velocity-space gradients of the ion and
electron distribution function from the skymaps provided by FPI. We
present initial results validating and comparing the contributions from
∂f/∂t, v·∇f, and a·∇vf for a variety of kinetic plasma contexts
including both reconnection and non-reconnection events, such as
electron diffusion regions (EDRs), magnetic holes, and thin
electron-scale current sheets. The ability to resolve gradients of the
distribution function motivates comparison of MMS observations to
predictions from gyro-kinetic theory and particle-in-cell (PIC)
simulations as an approach for determining which physical mechanism is
responsible for generating ion and electron crescent distributions
observed in association with EDRs and thin boundary layers.