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The integral and correlation scales of solar wind turbulence

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Announce Type: new Abstract: Many works have attempted to estimate the correlation and integral timescales associated with turbulent fluctuations in the solar wind, which are interpreted as length scales based on Taylor's~Hypothesis. However, accurate estimates of these timescales from spacecraft observations heavily rely on the accurate estimation of autocorrelation functions (ACF), which have been recently shown to depend strongly on the interval length used to estimate them. In this...

arXiv:2606.09750v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Many works have attempted to estimate the correlation and integral timescales associated with turbulent fluctuations in the solar wind, which are interpreted as length scales based on Taylor's~Hypothesis. However, accurate estimates of these timescales from spacecraft observations heavily rely on the accurate estimation of autocorrelation functions (ACF), which have been recently shown to depend strongly on the interval length used to estimate them. In this Letter, we show that this dependence on interval length may be artificial because common ACF estimators do not correctly capture the long-lag behavior of the true ACF of the underlying turbulence. We introduce a new ergodicity-based methodology to unambiguously estimate the integral timescale, and a new ACF estimator with better ergodic convergence than current ones. Due to its ergodic properties, the new ACF estimator properly captures the long-lag behavior, and is independent of the interval length. We use this approach to estimate the integral and correlation scales of magnetic fluctuations in the solar wind near $1~{\rm au}$.
ACF (ORG)
Originally published by arXiv Physics Read original →