Large parallel (≤ 100 mV/m) and perpendicular (≤ 600 mV/m) electric
fields were measured in the Earth's bow shock by the vector electric field
experiment on the Polar satellite. These are the first reported direct
measurements of parallel electric fields in a collisionless shock. These fields
exist on spatial scales comparable to or less than the electron skin depth (a
few kilometers) and correspond to magnetic field-aligned potentials of tens of
volts and perpendicular potentials up to a kilovolt. The perpendicular fields
are amongst the largest ever measured in space, with energy densities of
ϵ0E2/nkbTe of order 10%. The measured parallel electric field
implies that the electrons can be demagnetized, which may result in stochastic
(rather than coherent) electron heating