Chae-Woo Jun

and 19 more

We performed a statistical study of electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) wave distributions and their coupling with energetic protons in the inner magnetosphere using the Arase satellite data from May 2017 to December 2020. We investigated the energetic proton pitch-angle distributions and partial thermal pressures associated with EMIC waves using inter-calibrated proton data in the energy range of 30 eV/q-187 keV/q. With a cold plasma approximation, we computed the proton minimum resonance energies using the observed EMIC wave frequency and plasma density values. We found that the EMIC waves had left-handed polarization near the magnetic equator close to the threshold of proton cyclotron instability, and propagated to higher latitudes along the field line with polarization reversal. H-EMIC waves showed two peak occurrence regions in the morning and noon sectors at L=7.5-9 outside the plasmasphere. The flux enhancements associated with morning side H-EMIC waves appeared at E<1 keV/q among all pitch angles, while H-EMIC waves in the noon sector exhibited flux enhancement in field-aligned directions at E=1-100 keV/q. He-EMIC waves showed a broad occurrence region from 12 to 20 magnetic local time at L=5.5-8.5 inside the plasmasphere with strong flux enhancements at all pitch-angle ranges at E=1-100 keV/q. The proton minimum resonance energy using the obtained central frequency was consistent with the observed flux enhancements at different peak occurrence regions. We conclude that the free energy sources of EMIC waves in different geomagnetic environments drive the two different types of EMIC waves, and they interact with energetic protons at different energy ranges.

Masahiro Kitahara

and 7 more

Wataru Sawaguchi

and 3 more

We present statistical analyses of whistler-mode waves observed by Acceleration, Reconnection, Turbulence and Electrodynamics of the Moon’s Interaction with the Sun (ARTEMIS). Although some observations showed rising tone elements of the lunar whistler-mode waves similar to the terrestrial chorus emissions, it remains unknown whether a banded structure typically seen in chorus is common to the lunar waves. In this study, we automatically detected whistler-mode waves from 9 years of ARTEMIS data and classified them into four types of spectral shapes: lower band only, upper band only, banded, and no-gap. We first show that magnetic connection to the lunar surface is a dominant factor in the wave generation; the occurrence rate of whistler mode waves is more than 10 times larger on magnetic field lines connected to the Moon than on unconnected field lines. Then we compared the field line connected events according to the position of the Moon and the condition of the field-line foot point (day/night and existence of lunar magnetic anomalies). The results show that (i) almost no banded event is observed in any circumstances, suggesting that generation mechanisms for the two band structure on the terrestrial chorus are largely ineffective around the Moon, and (ii) the wave occurrence rate depends on the foot point conditions, presumably affected by electrostatic/magnetic reflections deforming the velocity distribution of the resonant electrons. Thus, our results provide implications for the two band structure formation and new insights to fundamental processes of the Moon-plasma interaction.

Chae-Woo Jun

and 16 more

We performed a comprehensive statistical study of electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves observed by the Van Allen Probes and Exploration of energization and Radiation in Geospace satellite (ERG/Arase). From 2017 to 2018, we identified and categorized EMIC wave events with respect to wavebands (H+ and He+ EMIC waves) and relative locations from the plasmasphere (inside and outside the plasmasphere). We found that H-band EMIC waves in the morning sector at L>8 are predominantly observed with a mixture of linear and right-handed polarity and higher wave normal angles during quiet geomagnetic conditions. Both H+ and He+ EMIC waves observed in the noon sector at L~4-6 have left-handed polarity and lower wave normal angles at |MLAT|< 20˚ during the recovery phase of a storm with moderate solar wind pressure. In the afternoon sector (12-18 MLT), He-band EMIC waves are dominantly observed with strongly enhanced wave power at L~6-8 during the storm main phase, while in the dusk sector (17-21 MLT) they have lower wave normal angles with linear polarity at L>8 during geomagnetic quiet conditions. Based on distinct characteristics at different EMIC wave occurrence regions, we suggest that EMIC waves in the magnetosphere can be generated by different free energy sources. Possible sources include the freshly injected particles from the plasma sheet, adiabatic heating by dayside magnetospheric compressions, suprathermal proton heating by magnetosonic waves, and off-equatorial sources.