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(50% Seminar) Statistical study of SLAMS at different planetary foreshocks

Time: Fri 2026-01-23 10.30

Location: Gustaf Dahlander

Video link: https://kth-se.zoom.us/j/3575907732

Language: English

Participating: Frank Tsz Kiu Wong Chan

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The properties of the region upstream of planetary bow shocks depend strongly on the direction of the interplanetary magnetic field. For the quasi-parallel bow shock, part of the solar wind ions is reflected back upstream from the shock and this reflected ion population triggers instabilities resulting in a turbulent region. Within this region, Short Large-Amplitude Magnetic Structures (SLAMS) can frequently be found, which are suggested to play a pivotal role in the formation of planetary bow shocks. Yet many properties of SLAMS are not well known at Earth and even less so at other planets.

SLAMS are identified by three criteria. First, a magnetic field amplitude twice the background magnetic field is required. Second, SLAMS should exhibit an elliptic polarization so that it can be differentiated from a shock oscillation. Last, it takes place upstream of the bow shock. 

Here we present results on the occurrence and other properties of SLAMS at different planetary foreshocks including Mars, Saturn and Mercury using different space missions. The results presented here can also offer comparative insights with SLAMS found at Earth for exploring potential dependencies on system size, and other magnetospheric and solar wind parameters.

Page responsible:Web editors at EECS
Belongs to: Electromagnetics and Plasma Physics
Last changed: Jan 13, 2026