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Plasma Double Layers at the Boundary between Venus and the Solar Wind
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  • David M. Malaspina,
  • Katherine Amanda Goodrich,
  • Roberto Livi,
  • Jasper S. Halekas,
  • Michael D McManus,
  • Shannon M. Curry,
  • Stuart D. Bale,
  • John W. Bonnell,
  • Thierry Dudok de Wit,
  • Keith Goetz,
  • Peter R Harvey,
  • Robert John MacDowall,
  • Marc Pulupa,
  • Anthony William Case,
  • Justin Kasper,
  • Kelly Korreck,
  • Davin E. Larson,
  • Phyllis Whittlesey
David M. Malaspina
University of Colorado Boulder

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Katherine Amanda Goodrich
University of California, Berkeley
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Roberto Livi
University of California, Berkeley
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Jasper S. Halekas
University of Iowa
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Michael D McManus
University of California, Berkeley
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Shannon M. Curry
UC Berkeley
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Stuart D. Bale
UC Berkeley
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John W. Bonnell
University of California, Berkeley
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Thierry Dudok de Wit
CNRS and University of Orléans
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Keith Goetz
University of Minnesota
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Peter R Harvey
Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley
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Robert John MacDowall
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
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Marc Pulupa
Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley
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Anthony William Case
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
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Justin Kasper
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
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Kelly Korreck
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
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Davin E. Larson
University of California, Berkeley
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Phyllis Whittlesey
University of California, Berkeley
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Abstract

The solar wind is slowed, deflected, and heated as it encounters Venus's induced magnetosphere. The importance of kinetic plasma processes to these interactions has not been examined in detail, due to a lack of constraining observations. In this study, kinetic-scale electric field structures are identified in the Venusian magnetosheath, including plasma double layers. The double layers may be driven by currents or mixing of inhomogeneous plasmas near the edge of the magnetosheath. Estimated double layer spatial scales are consistent with those reported at Earth. Estimated potential drops are similar to electron temperature gradients across the bow shock. Many double layers are found in few high cadence data captures, suggesting that their amplitudes are high relative to other magnetosheath plasma waves. These are the first direct observations of plasma double layers beyond near-Earth space, supporting the idea that kinetic plasma processes are active in many space plasma environments.
28 Oct 2020Published in Geophysical Research Letters volume 47 issue 20. 10.1029/2020GL090115