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A statistical study of the propagation characteristics of whistler waves observed by Cluster
Author(s) -
Agapitov Oleksiy,
Krasnoselskikh Vladimir,
Khotyaintsev Yuri V.,
Rolland Guy
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2011gl049597
Subject(s) - whistler , physics , computational physics , earth's magnetic field , equator , geophysics , van allen radiation belt , latitude , wave propagation , plasmasphere , range (aeronautics) , magnetic field , magnetosphere , optics , astronomy , composite material , materials science , quantum mechanics
VLF waves play a crucial role in the dynamics of radiation belts, and are responsible for the loss and the acceleration of energetic electrons. Modeling wave‐particle interactions requires the best possible knowledge for how wave energy and wave‐normal directions are distributed in L ‐shells and for the magnetic latitudes of different magnetic activity conditions. In this work, we performed a statistical study for VLF emissions using a whistler frequency range for nine years (2001–2009) of Cluster measurements. We utilized data from the STAFF‐SA experiment, which spans the frequency range from 8.8 Hz to 3.56 kHz. We show that the wave energy distribution has two maxima around L ∼ 4.5 − 6 and L ∼ 2, and that wave‐normals are directed approximately along the magnetic field in the vicinity of the geomagnetic equator. The distribution changes with magnetic latitude, and so that at latitudes of ∼30°, wave‐normals become nearly perpendicular to the magnetic field. The observed angular distribution is significantly different from Gaussian and the width of the distribution increases with latitude. Since the resonance condition for wave‐particle interactions depends on the wave normal orientation, our results indicate that, due to the observed change in the wave‐normal direction with latitude, the most efficient particle diffusion due to wave‐particle interaction should occur in a limited region surrounding the geomagnetic equator.