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Statistical study of chorus wave distributions in the inner magnetosphere using A e and solar wind parameters
Author(s) -
Aryan Homayon,
Yearby Keith,
Balikhin Michael,
Agapitov Oleksiy,
Krasnoselskikh Vladimir,
Boynton Richard
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9402
pISSN - 2169-9380
DOI - 10.1002/2014ja019939
Subject(s) - earth's magnetic field , solar wind , physics , van allen radiation belt , magnetosphere , geomagnetic storm , geophysics , interplanetary magnetic field , van allen probes , geostationary orbit , chorus , computational physics , atmospheric sciences , magnetic field , astronomy , satellite , quantum mechanics , art , literature
Abstract Energetic electrons within the Earth's radiation belts represent a serious hazard to geostationary satellites. The interactions of electrons with chorus waves play an important role in both the acceleration and loss of radiation belt electrons. The common approach is to present model wave distributions in the inner magnetosphere under different values of geomagnetic activity as expressed by the geomagnetic indices. However, it has been shown that only around 50% of geomagnetic storms increase flux of relativistic electrons at geostationary orbit while 20% causes a decrease and the remaining 30% has relatively no effect. This emphasizes the importance of including solar wind parameters such as bulk velocity ( V ), density ( n ), flow pressure ( P ), and the vertical interplanetary magnetic field component ( B z ) that are known to be predominately effective in the control of high energy fluxes at the geostationary orbit. Therefore, in the present study the set of parameters of the wave distributions is expanded to include the solar wind parameters in addition to the geomagnetic activity. The present study examines almost 4 years (1 January 2004 to 29 September 2007) of Spatio‐Temporal Analysis of Field Fluctuation data from Double Star TC1 combined with geomagnetic indices and solar wind parameters from OMNI database in order to present a comprehensive model of wave magnetic field intensities for the chorus waves as a function of magnetic local time, L shell ( L ), magnetic latitude ( λ m ), geomagnetic activity, and solar wind parameters. Generally, the results indicate that the intensity of chorus emission is not only dependent upon geomagnetic activity but also dependent on solar wind parameters with velocity and southward interplanetary magnetic field B s ( B z < 0), evidently the most influential solar wind parameters. The largest peak chorus intensities in the order of 50 pT are observed during active conditions, high solar wind velocities, low solar wind densities, high pressures, and high B s . The average chorus intensities are more extensive and stronger for lower band chorus than the corresponding upper band chorus.