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Rocket Observation of Sub‐Relativistic Electrons in the Quiet Dayside Auroral Ionosphere
Author(s) -
Namekawa T.,
Mitani T.,
Asamura K.,
Miyoshi Y.,
Hosokawa K.,
Ogawa Y.,
Saito S.,
Hori T.,
Sugo S.,
Kawashima O.,
Kasahara S.,
Nomura R.,
Yagi N.,
Fukizawa M.,
Sakanoi T.,
Saito Y.,
Matsuoka A.,
Shinohara I.,
Fedorenko Y.,
Nikitenko A.,
Koehler C.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9402
pISSN - 2169-9380
DOI - 10.1029/2020ja028633
Subject(s) - physics , whistler , sounding rocket , ionosphere , electron , rocket (weapon) , electron precipitation , van allen radiation belt , geophysics , pitch angle , computational physics , magnetosphere , plasma , astronomy , nuclear physics , geography , archaeology
An energy spectrum of electrons from 180 to 550 keV precipitating into the dayside polar ionosphere was observed under a geomagnetically quiet condition (AE ≤ 100 nT, Kp = 1‐). The observation was carried out at 73–184 km altitudes by the HEP instrument onboard the RockSat‐XN sounding rocket that has been launched from Andøya, Norway. The observed energy spectrum of precipitating electrons follows a power law of −4.9 ± 0.4 and the electron flux does not vary much over the observation period (∼274.4 s). A nearby ground‐based VLF receiver observation at Lovozero, Russia shows the presence of whistler‐mode wave activities during the rocket observation. A few minutes before the RockSat‐XN observation, POES18/MEPED observed precipitating electrons, which also suggest whistler‐mode chorus wave activities at the location close to the rocket trajectory. A test‐particle simulation for wave‐particle interactions was carried out using the data of the Arase satellite as the initial condition which was located on the duskside. The result of the simulation shows that whistler‐mode waves can resonate with sub‐relativistic electrons at high latitudes. These results suggest that the precipitation observed by RockSat‐XN is likely to be caused by the wave‐particle interactions between whistler‐mode waves and sub‐relativistic electrons.