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Space Physics Seminar

semester, 2007


Tuesday, January 16th 2007
Subject: Organizational Meeting

Tuesday, January 23rd 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Professor Mark Engebretson, Augsburg College
Subject: "Pc 1-2 Waves and Energetic Particle Precipitation During and After Magnetic Storms: Superposed Epoch Analysis and Case Studies.

Tuesday, January 30th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
No seminar this week.

Tuesday, February 6th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Professor Terry Jones, University of Minnesota
Subject: Magnetic Fields in Galaxies

Tuesday, February 13th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
No seminar this week.

Tuesday, February 20th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Lynn Wilson, University of Minnesota
Subject: Possible Dissipation Mechanisms of Interplanetary Shocks: Pilot Results from a Wind/WAVES Study

Tuesday, February 27th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
The Space Physics Seminar will not be held this week. Please attend the Physics and Astronomy Colloquium on Wednesday instead.

Tuesday, March 6th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Tom Jones, University of Minnesota
Subject: Modeling Particle Acceleration at Shocks.

Tuesday, March 13th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Spring Break: No Seminar this week.

Tuesday, March 20th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Slava Pilipenko, Space Research Institute, Moscow
Subject: Interaction of propagating magnetosonic and Alfven waves in longitudinally inhomogeneous gyrotropic plasma.

Tuesday, March 27th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Bob Lysak, University of Minnesota
Subject: Alfven wave propagation in the Io plasma torus.

Tuesday, April 3rd 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Yukitoshi Nishimura, Tohoku University
Subject: Storm-time large-scale electric fields observed by the Akebono satellite

Tuesday, April 10th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Professor Roberta Humphries, University of Minnesota
Subject: Hypergiant Stars: The Evidence for Episodic Mass Loss, Convective Activity and Magnetic Fields.

Tuesday, April 17th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Lei Dai, University of Minnesota
Subject: Hall conductivity in a collisionless plasma.

Tuesday, April 24th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Prof. Doug Ernie, ECE Department, U of M
Subject: Plasma Induced Neutral Flows - Theory and Applications

Tuesday, May 1st 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
Speaker: Prof. Paul Kellogg, University of Minnesota
Subject: The in-situ plasma wave experiment on STEREO

Tuesday, May 8th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
No seminar this week.

Tuesday, September 11th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 236A Physics
No Seminar This Week

Tuesday, September 18th 2007
1:25 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Cynthia Cattell, University of Minnesota
Subject: STEREO observations of large amplitude whistler wave in the Van Allen belts: Implications for electron energization

Tuesday, September 25th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
No Seminar This Week

Tuesday, October 9th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Professor Gordon Rostoker, University of Alberta, Edmonton
Subject: Substorms: the Evolution of a Concept

Tuesday, October 16th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Ed Smith, Jet Propulsion Lab, NASA
Subject: The Heliospheric Plasma Sheet: Structure and Dynamics

The Heliospheric Current Sheet (HCS) separating magnetic fields from the Sun’s north and south magnetic poles is surrounded by the Heliospheric Plasma Sheet (HPS). The current sheet is usually identified as an abrupt reversal in field polarity but also by a reversal in flow direction of the electron heat flux. The plasma sheet is identified as a decrease in field strength (B) and a simultaneous increase in plasma density (n) or by an increase in plasma beta or entropy.

A fundamental aspect of HCS- HPS structure is their thicknesses and how they vary with radial distance. Ulysses observations provided an opportunity to determine these thicknesses at 3 and 5 AU during solar minimum and to then compare them with the thicknesses at 1 AU using ACE data. Surprisingly, HCS thickness is found to decrease with distance whereas HPS thickness increases. These results will be presented along with a discussion of the HCS-HPS identifications and their relation to heat flux.

The Ulysses data near 5 AU also provided an opportunity to investigate the dynamics of the HPS, i.e., the presence or absence of waves or turbulence. Observations of the HPS near 5 AU are advantageous because the spacecraft spends longer intervals inside the thicker plasma sheet. Simultaneous magnetic field and plasma data were analyzed, the resolution of the plasma analyzer limiting the periods under investigation to > 10 minutes. The diagnosis involved distinguishing between various possibilities including non-propagating structures such as mirror modes. Comparison of changes in magnetic field and solar wind velocity components show that the dominant mode is not Alfvenic but involves the anti-correlations between B and n. Therefore, a subsequent analysis was based on relations between magnetic pressure, thermal or kinetic pressure and total pressure that distinguish between the various possibilities. In the examples analyzed, the fluctuations are dominated by the slow magnetosonic mode, an interesting result since slow mode waves are not commonly identified in the solar wind.


Tuesday, October 23rd 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Paul Kellogg, University of Minnesota
Subject: How to measure density and electric field with only 3 antennas

Tuesday, October 30th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Dr. Yan Song, University of Minnesota
Subject: Magnetic Reconnection or Irreversible Reactive Interaction in Cosmic Plasmas?

Thursday, November 8th 2007
10:10 am:
Space Physics Seminar in 170 Physics
Speaker: Walter Gekelman from UCLA
Subject: Experiments relevant to space at the UCLA Basic Plasma Science Facility
Please note different time and place.

Tuesday, November 13th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Scott Thaller, University of Minnesota
Subject: Survey and Significance of Bipolar Electric Fields observed near a Magnetic Reconnection Region in the Geomagnetic tail

Tuesday, November 20th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Lynn Wilson, University of Minnesota
Subject: Waves at Interplanetary Shocks: New Results from Wind and STEREO

Tuesday, November 27th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Dr. John Dombeck, University of Minnesota
Subject: Intense, Earthward, Broadband Electron Events Observed at Low Latitude During Major Geomagnetic Storms at FAST

Tuesday, December 4th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
Speaker: Lei Dai, University of Minnesota
Subject: Cluster observation of extremely oblique low frequency waves in the magnetic reconnection jet in the geomagnetic tail.

Tuesday, December 11th 2007
1:00 pm:
Space Physics Seminar in 143 Physics
No seminar this week. This event will resume spring semester.

Tuesday, December 18th 2007
This event will resume spring semester.

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