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Creators/Authors contains: "Matsuoka, Ayako"

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  1. Abstract The present study investigates mid‐ and low‐latitude ground magnetic disturbances observed following the arrival of three interplanetary (IP) shocks during the super‐geomagnetic storms of February 1958 and July 1959. One may expect that after IP shocks, the H (northward) magnetic component increases globally but especially on the dayside. However, in each event, the H component was depressed sharply for 1–2 hr in the dawn‐to‐noon sector, whereas it increased in other local time (LT) sectors. Observed magnetic deflections suggest that there existed field‐aligned currents (FACs) flowing into and out of the auroral zone around the western and eastern edges of the LT sector of the dayside H depression. These features strongly suggests that the observed H depression was a remote effect of a R1‐sense FAC system. It was previously reported that similar ground magnetic disturbances were observed after the SSC of the 2003 Halloween storm, which reveals striking similarities to the well‐known H depression observed at Colaba during the 1859 Carrington storm. It is therefore suggested that the external driving behind IP shocks, especially those associated with major storms, is most optimum for the sharp reduction of the dayside H component through the formation and intensification of the dayside FAC system. Associated magnetic disturbances are considered to be larger in magnitude with increasing magnetic latitude, and oriented azimuthally as well as meridionally. Such magnetic disturbances in dayside midlatitudes may not be discussed very often as a target of space weather, but their potential impacts on ground infrastructures probably require closer attention. 
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  2. Abstract Energetic electron precipitation from Earth’s outer radiation belt heats the upper atmosphere and alters its chemical properties. The precipitating flux intensity, typically modelled using inputs from high-altitude, equatorial spacecraft, dictates the radiation belt’s energy contribution to the atmosphere and the strength of space-atmosphere coupling. The classical quasi-linear theory of electron precipitation through moderately fast diffusive interactions with plasma waves predicts that precipitating electron fluxes cannot exceed fluxes of electrons trapped in the radiation belt, setting an apparent upper limit for electron precipitation. Here we show from low-altitude satellite observations, that ~100 keV electron precipitation rates often exceed this apparent upper limit. We demonstrate that such superfast precipitation is caused by nonlinear electron interactions with intense plasma waves, which have not been previously incorporated in radiation belt models. The high occurrence rate of superfast precipitation suggests that it is important for modelling both radiation belt fluxes and space-atmosphere coupling. 
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  3. Abstract Ultra‐low‐frequency (ULF) waves are known to radially diffuse hundreds‐keV to few‐MeV electrons in the magnetosphere, as the range of drift frequencies of such electrons overlaps with the frequencies of the waves, leading to resonant interactions. The theoretical framework for this process is described by analytic expressions of the resonant interactions between electrons and toroidal and poloidal ULF wave modes in a background magnetic field. However, most expressions estimate the radial diffusion rates based on estimates of the power of ULF waves that are obtained either from spacecraft close to the equatorial plane or from the ground. In this study, using multiyear measurements from the THEMIS and Arase missions, we present a statistical analysis of the distribution of ULF wave power in magnetic latitude and local time and show that the wave power of the radial and azimuthal components of the magnetic field increases away from the magnetic equator. Our result could have significant implications for the radial diffusion rates as currently estimated. 
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