Large-Amplitude Whistler Waves and Electron Acceleration in the Earth's Radiation Belts: A Review of Stereo and Wind Observations
Author(s) -
C. A. Cattell,
A. W. Breneman,
K. Goetz,
P. J. Kellogg,
K. Kersten,
J. R. Wygant,
L. B. Wilson,
M. D. Looper,
J. B. Blake,
I. Roth
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
geophysical monograph
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.375
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 2328-8779
pISSN - 0065-8448
DOI - 10.1029/2012gm001322
Subject(s) - whistler , van allen radiation belt , amplitude , acceleration , geophysics , earth (classical element) , physics , radiation , geology , meteorology , electron , astronomy , optics , classical mechanics , plasma , magnetosphere , nuclear physics
One of the critical problems for understanding the dynamics of Earth's radiation belts is determining the physical processes that energize and scatter relativistic electrons. We review measurements from the Wind/Waves and STEREO S/Waves waveform capture instruments of large amplitude whistler-mode waves. These observations have provided strong evidence that large amplitude (100s mV/m) whistler-mode waves are common during magnetically active periods. The large amplitude whistlers have characteristics that are different from typical chorus. They are usually nondispersive and obliquely propagating, with a large longitudinal electric field and significant parallel electric field. We will also review comparisons of STEREO and Wind wave observations with SAMPEX observations of electron microbursts. Simulations show that the waves can result in energization by many MeV and/or scattering by large angles during a single wave packet encounter due to coherent, nonlinear processes including trapping. The experimental observations combined with simulations suggest that quasilinear theoretical models of electron energization and scattering via small-amplitude waves, with timescales of hours to days, may be inadequate for understanding radiation belt dynamics.
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