The spacecraft wake as a tool to detect cold ions: Turning a problem
into a feature
Abstract
Wakes behind spacecraft caused by supersonic drifting positive ions are
common in plasmas and disturb in situ measurements. We concentrate on
observations of the electric field with double-probe instruments. When
the equivalent spacecraft charging is small compared to the ion drift
energy the wake effects are caused by the spacecraft body and can be
compensated for. We discuss examples from the Cluster spacecraft in the
solar wind, including statistics of the direction, width and
electrostatic potential of wakes, and compare with an analytical model.
When the equivalent positive spacecraft charging is large compared to
the ion drift energy, an enhanced wake forms. In this case observations
of the geophysical electric field with the double-probe technique
becomes extremely challenging. Rather, the wake can be used to estimate
the flux of cold (eV) positive ions. We discuss such examples from the
Cluster spacecraft in the low-density magnetospheric lobes. For an
intermediate range of parameters, when the equivalent charging of the
spacecraft is similar to the drift energy of the ions, also the charged
wire booms of a double-probe instrument must be taken into account. We
discuss an example of these effects from the MMS spacecraft near the
magnetopause. We find that the observed wake characteristics provide
information which can be used for scientific studies. An important
example is the enhanced wakes used to estimate the outflow of
ionospheric origin in the magnetospheric lobes to about 10^26 cold
(eV) ions/s, constituting a large fraction of the mass outflow from
planet Earth.