Abstract Although the effects of electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves on the dynamics of the Earth's outer radiation belt have been a topic of intense research for more than 20 years, their influence on rapid dropouts of electron flux has not yet been fully assessed. Here, we make use of contemporaneous measurements on the same ‐shell of trapped electron fluxes at 20,000 km altitude by Global Positioning System (GPS) spacecraft and of trapped and precipitating electron fluxes at 450 km altitude by Electron Losses and Fields Investigation (ELFIN) CubeSats in 2020–2022, to investigate the impact of EMIC wave‐driven electron precipitation on the dynamics of the outer radiation belt below the last closed drift shell of trapped electrons. During six of the seven selected events, the strong 1–2 MeV electron precipitation measured at ELFIN, likely driven by EMIC waves, occurs within 1–2 hr from a dropout of relativistic electron flux at GPS spacecraft. Using quasi‐linear diffusion theory, EMIC wave‐driven pitch angle diffusion rates are inferred from ELFIN measurements, allowing us to quantitatively estimate the corresponding flux drop based on typical spatial and temporal extents of EMIC waves. We find that EMIC wave‐driven electron precipitation alone can account for the observed dropout magnitude at 1.5–3 MeV during all events and that, when dropouts extend down to 0.5 MeV, a fraction of electron loss may sometimes be due to EMIC waves. This suggests that EMIC wave‐driven electron precipitation could modulate dropout magnitude above 1 MeV in the heart of the outer radiation belt.
more »
« less
ELFIN‐GPS Comparison of Energetic Electron Fluxes: Modeling Low‐Altitude Electron Flux Mapping to the Equatorial Magnetosphere
Abstract Near‐equatorial measurements of energetic electron fluxes, in combination with numerical simulation, are widely used for monitoring of the radiation belt dynamics. However, the long orbital periods of near‐equatorial spacecraft constrain the cadence of observations to once per several hours or greater, that is, much longer than the mesoscale injections and rapid local acceleration and losses of energetic electrons of interest. An alternative approach for radiation belt monitoring is to use measurements of low‐altitude spacecraft, which cover, once per hour or faster, the latitudinal range of the entire radiation belt within a few minutes. Such an approach requires, however, a procedure for mapping the flux from low equatorial pitch angles (near the loss cone) as measured at low altitude, to high equatorial pitch angles (far from the loss cone), as necessitated by equatorial flux models. Here we do this using the high energy resolution ELFIN measurements of energetic electrons. Combining those with GPS measurements we develop a model for the electron anisotropy coefficient, , that describes electron flux dependence on equatorial pitch‐angle, , . We then validate this model by comparing its equatorial predictions from ELFIN with in‐situ near‐equatorial measurements from Arase (ERG) in the outer radiation belt.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 2329897
- PAR ID:
- 10586819
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Geophysical Union
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
- Volume:
- 129
- Issue:
- 11
- ISSN:
- 2169-9380
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Abstract The strong variations of energetic electron fluxes in the Earth's inner magnetosphere are notoriously hard to forecast. Developing accurate empirical models of electron fluxes from low to high altitudes at all latitudes is therefore useful to improve our understanding of flux variations and to assess radiation hazards for spacecraft systems. In the present work, energy‐ and pitch‐angle‐resolved precipitating, trapped, and backscattered electron fluxes measured at low altitude by Electron Loss and Fields Investigation (ELFIN) CubeSats are used to infer omnidirectional fluxes at altitudes below and above the spacecraft, from 150 to 20,000 km, making use of adiabatic transport theory and quasi‐linear diffusion theory. The inferred fluxes are fitted as a function of selected parameters using a stepwise multivariate optimization procedure, providing an analytical model of omnidirectional electron flux along each geomagnetic field line, based on measurements from only one spacecraft in low Earth orbit. The modeled electron fluxes are provided as a function of ‐shell, altitude, energy, and two different indices of past substorm activity, computed over the preceding 4 hr or 3 days, potentially allowing to disentangle impulsive processes (such as rapid injections) from cumulative processes (such as inward radial diffusion and wave‐driven energization). The model is validated through comparisons with equatorial measurements from the Van Allen Probes, demonstrating the broad applicability of the present method. The model indicates that both impulsive and time‐integrated substorm activity partly control electron fluxes in the outer radiation belt and in the plasma sheet.more » « less
-
Abstract Electron cyclotron harmonic waves (ECH) play a key role in scattering and precipitation of plasma sheet electrons. Previous analysis on the resonant interaction between ECH waves and electrons assumed that these waves are generated by a loss cone distribution and propagate nearly perpendicular to the background magnetic field. Recent spacecraft observations, however, have demonstrated that such waves can also be generated by low energy electron beams and propagate at moderately oblique angles . To quantify the effects of this newly observed ECH wave mode on electron dynamics in Earth's magnetosphere, we use quasi‐linear theory to calculate the associated electron pitch angle diffusion coefficient. Utilizing THEMIS spacecraft measurements, we analyze in detail a few representative events of beam‐driven ECH waves in the plasma sheet and the outer radiation belt. Based on the observed wave properties and the hot plasma dispersion relation of these waves, we calculate their bounce‐averaged pitch angle, momentum and mixed diffusion coefficients. We find that these waves most efficiently scatter low‐energy electrons (10–500 eV) toward larger pitch angles, on time scales of to seconds. In contrast, loss‐cone‐driven ECH waves most efficiently scatter higher‐energy electrons (500 eV–5 keV) toward lower pitch‐angles. Importantly, beam‐driven ECH waves can effectively scatter ionospheric electron outflows out of the loss cone near the magnetic equator. As a result, these outflows become trapped in the magnetosphere, forming a near‐field‐aligned anisotropic electron population. Our work highlights the importance of ECH waves, particularly beam‐driven modes, in regulating magnetosphere‐ionosphere particle and energy coupling.more » « less
-
Abstract Electron precipitation by chorus whistler‐mode waves generated by the same electron population is expected to play an important role in the dynamics of the outer radiation belt, potentially setting a hard upper limit on trapped energetic electron fluxes. Here, we statistically analyze the relationship between equatorial electron fluxes and the power of mid‐latitude cyclotron‐resonant chorus waves precipitating these electrons, both inferred from ELFIN low‐altitude energy and pitch‐angle resolved electron flux measurements in 2020–2022. We provide clear evidence of a flux limitation coinciding with an exponential increase of precipitation. We statistically demonstrate that the actual inferred resonant wave power gains are well correlated with theoretical linear gains, as in the classical Kennel‐Petschek model, for moderately high linear gains and high fluxes. However, we also find a finite occurrence of very high fluxes, corresponding to resonant waves of moderate average amplitude, implying a softer, more dynamical upper limit than traditionally envisioned.more » « less
-
Abstract Energetic electron precipitation from the equatorial magnetosphere into the atmosphere plays an important role in magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling: precipitating electrons alter ionospheric properties, whereas ionospheric outflows modify equatorial plasma conditions affecting electromagnetic wave generation and energetic electron scattering. However, ionospheric measurements cannot be directly related to wave and energetic electron properties measured by high‐altitude, near‐equatorial spacecraft, due to large mapping uncertainties. We aim to resolve this by projecting low‐altitude measurements of energetic electron precipitation by ELFIN CubeSats onto total electron content (TEC) maps serving as a proxy for ionospheric density structures. We examine three types of precipitation on the nightside: precipitation of <200 keV electrons in the plasma sheet, bursty precipitation of <500 keV electrons by whistler‐mode waves, and relativistic (>500 keV) electron precipitation by EMIC waves. All three types of precipitation show distinct features in TEC horizontal gradients, and we discuss possible implications of these features.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

