120 research outputs found

    Double layers above the aurora

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    Two different kinds of double layers were found in association with auroral precipitation. One of these is the so-called electrostatic shock, which is oriented at an oblique angle to the magnetic field in such a way that the perpendicular electric field is much larger than the parallel electric field. This type of double layer is often found at the edges of regions of upflowing ion beams and the direction of the electric fields in the shock points toward the ion beam. The potential drop through the shock can be several kV and is comparable to the total potential needed to produce auroral acceleration. Instabilities associated with the shock may generate obliquely propagating Alfven waves, which may accelerate electrons to produce flickering auroras. The flickering aurora provides evidence that the electrostatic shock may have large temporal fluctuations. The other kind of double layer is the small-amplitude double layer found in regions of upward flowing in beams, often in association with electrostatic ion cyclotron waves. The parallel and perpendicular electric fields in these structures are comparable in magnitude. The associated potentials are a few eV. Since many such double layers are found in regions of upward flowing ion beams, the combined potential drop through a set of these double layers can be substantial

    Resonant enhancement of relativistic electron fluxes during geomagnetically active periods

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    Resonant enhancement of relativistic electron fluxes during geomagnetically active periods

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    The strong increase in the ̄ux of relativistic electrons during the recovery phase of magnetic storms and during other active periods is investigated with the help of Hamiltonian formalism and simulations of test electrons which interact with whistler waves. The intensity of the whistler waves is enhanced signi®cantly due to injection of 10±100 keV electrons during the substorm. Electrons which drift in the gradient and curvature of the magnetic ®eld generate the rising tones of VLF whistler chorus. The seed population of relativ- istic electrons which bounce along the inhomogeneous magnetic ®eld, interacts resonantly with the whistler waves. Whistler wave propagating obliquely to the magnetic ®eld can interact with energetic electrons through Landau, cyclotron, and higher harmonic reso- nant interactions when the Doppler-shifted wave fre- quency equals any (positive or negative) integer multiple of the local relativistic gyrofrequency. Because the gyroradius of a relativistic electron may be the order of or greater than the perpendicular wavelength, numerous cyclotron, harmonics can contribute to the resonant interaction which breaks down the adiabatic invariant. A similar process di��uses the pitch angle leading to electron precipitation. The irreversible changes in the adiabatic invariant depend on the relative phase between the wave and the electron, and successive resonant interactions result in electrons undergoing a random walk in energy and pitch angle. This resonant process may contribute to the 10±100 fold increase of the relativistic electron ̄ux in the outer radiation belt, and constitute an interesting relation between substorm-generated waves and en- hancements in ̄uxes of relativistic electrons during geomagnetic storms and other active periods

    Simulating radial diffusion of energetic (MeV) electrons through a model of fluctuating electric and magnetic fields

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    International audienceIn the present work, a test particle simulation is performed in a model of analytic Ultra Low Frequency, ULF, perturbations in the electric and magnetic fields of the Earth's magnetosphere. The goal of this work is to examine if the radial transport of energetic particles in quiet-time ULF magnetospheric perturbations of various azimuthal mode numbers can be described as a diffusive process and be approximated by theoretically derived radial diffusion coefficients. In the model realistic compressional electromagnetic field perturbations are constructed by a superposition of a large number of propagating electric and consistent magnetic pulses. The diffusion rates of the electrons under the effect of the fluctuating fields are calculated numerically through the test-particle simulation as a function of the radial coordinate L in a dipolar magnetosphere; these calculations are then compared to the symmetric, electromagnetic radial diffusion coefficients for compressional, poloidal perturbations in the Earth's magnetosphere. In the model the amplitude of the perturbation fields can be adjusted to represent realistic states of magnetospheric activity. Similarly, the azimuthal modulation of the fields can be adjusted to represent different azimuthal modes of fluctuations and the contribution to radial diffusion from each mode can be quantified. Two simulations of quiet-time magnetospheric variability are performed: in the first simulation, diffusion due to poloidal perturbations of mode number m=1 is calculated; in the second, the diffusion rates from multiple-mode (m=0 to m=8) perturbations are calculated. The numerical calculations of the diffusion coefficients derived from the particle orbits are found to agree with the corresponding theoretical estimates of the diffusion coefficient within a factor of two

    Modeling of 1–2 September 1859 super magnetic storm

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    Abstract Based on an estimated solar wind condition around 1-2 September 1859, we were able to reproduce the Carrington magnetic storm magnetometer record, with the H-component depression of À1600 nT, made at Colaba Observatory in Mumbai, India. We used an updated Dst prediction model fro

    Modeling of 1–2 September 1859 super magnetic storm

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    Abstract Based on an estimated solar wind condition around 1-2 September 1859, we were able to reproduce the Carrington magnetic storm magnetometer record, with the H-component depression of À1600 nT, made at Colaba Observatory in Mumbai, India. We used an updated Dst prediction model fro

    Are Energetic Electrons in the Solar Wind the Source of the Outer Radiation Belt?

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    Using data from WIND, SAMPEX (Solar Anomalous, and Magnetospheric Particle Explorer), and the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) sensors onboard geostationary satellites, we investigate the correlation of energetic electrons in the 20–200 keV range in the solar wind and of high speed solar wind streams with relativistic electrons in the magnetosphere to determine whether energetic electrons in the solar wind are the source of the outer relativistic electron radiation belt. Though there is some correlation between energetic electron enhancements in the solar wind and enhancements in the outer radiation belt, the phase space density of 20–200 keV electrons in the solar wind is not adequate to supply the outer radiation belt electrons. Although lower energy electrons in the solar wind could be a seed population of the outer radiation belt, such lower energy electrons cannot achieve relativistic energies through the normal process of radial transport which conserves the first adiabatic invariant. Thus additional internal acceleration processes are required within the magnetosphere to produce the outer radiation belt. High speed solar wind streams are well correlated with increased magnetic activity and with increased fluxes in the outer radiation belt. The maximum correlation between the high speed streams and the radiation belt flux occurs with an increasing time delay for higher energies and and lower L values. We conclude that acceleration processes within the magnetosphere which are well correlated with high speed solar wind streams are responsible for the outer radiation belt electrons

    Nonlinear ion-acoustic (IA) waves driven in a cylindrically symmetric flow

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    By employing a self-similar, two-fluid MHD model in a cylindrical geometry, we study the features of nonlinear ion-acoustic (IA) waves which propagate in the direction of external magnetic field lines in space plasmas. Numerical calculations not only expose the well-known three shapes of nonlinear structures (sinusoidal, sawtooth, and spiky or bipolar) which are observed by numerous satellites and simulated by models in a Cartesian geometry, but also illustrate new results, such as, two reversely propagating nonlinear waves, density dips and humps, diverging and converging electric shocks, etc. A case study on Cluster satellite data is also introduced.Comment: accepted by AS
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