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Characteristics of pitch angle distributions of hundreds of keV electrons in the slot region and inner radiation belt
Author(s) -
Zhao H.,
Li X.,
Blake J. B.,
Fennell J. F.,
Claudepierre S. G.,
Baker D. N.,
Jaynes A. N.,
Malaspina D. M.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9402
pISSN - 2169-9380
DOI - 10.1002/2014ja020386
Subject(s) - pitch angle , van allen probes , van allen radiation belt , physics , electron , hiss , flux (metallurgy) , radiation , scattering , ion , atomic physics , optics , magnetosphere , plasma , materials science , nuclear physics , geophysics , quantum mechanics , metallurgy
The pitch angle distribution (PAD) of energetic electrons in the slot region and inner radiation belt received little attention in the past decades due to the lack of quality measurements. Using the state‐of‐the‐art pitch angle‐resolved data from the Magnetic Electron Ion Spectrometer instrument onboard the Van Allen Probes, a detailed analysis of hundreds of keV electron PADs below L = 4 is performed, in which the PADs are categorized into three types: normal (flux peaking at 90°), cap (exceedingly peaking narrowly around 90°), and 90° minimum (lower flux at 90°) PADs. By examining the characteristics of the PADs of ∼460 keV electrons for over a year, we find that the 90° minimum PADs are generally present in the inner belt ( L <2), while normal PADs dominate at L ∼3.5–4. In the region between, 90° minimum PADs dominate during injection times and normal PADs dominate during quiet times. Cap PADs appear mostly at the decay phase of storms in the slot region and are likely caused by the pitch angle scattering of hiss waves. Fitting the normal PADs into sin n α form, the parameter n is much higher below L = 3 than that in the outer belt and relatively constant in the inner belt but changes significantly in the slot region (2 < L < 3) during injection times. As for the 90° minimum PADs, by performing a detailed case study, we find in the slot region this type of PAD is likely caused by chorus wave heating, but this mechanism can hardly explain the formation of 90° minimum PADs at the center of inner belt.