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Investigation of Electron Distribution Functions Associated With Whistler Waves at Dipolarization Fronts in the Earth's Magnetotail: MMS Observations

Е. Е. Григоренко, A. Yu. Malykhin, D. R. Shklyar, S. Fadanelli, B. Lavraud, E. V. Panov, L. A. Avanov, B. L. Giles, O. Le Contel

2020Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Using burst mode Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) observations in the plasma sheet (PS), we study the dynamics of electron anisotropy and its relation to quasi‐parallel narrowband whistler bursts in 37 dipolarization fronts (DFs) propagating in the Earth's magnetotail along with fast flows at −25 R E ≤ X ≤ −17 R E . The bursts were observed at the DFs and behind them in the dipolarizing flux bundle (DFB) region with frequencies f peak ~ (0.1–0.6) f ce ( f c e is electron gyrofrequency) and durations approximately a few seconds. The majority of the whistler waves were associated with perpendicular electron temperature anisotropy T PER / T PAR > 1, and the value of this anisotropy decreased by the end of the bursts suggesting electron scattering by the waves. We found that the major contribution to the growth rate of whistler waves is made by resonant electrons with energies W res ~ 1–5 keV and pitch angles α res ~ 40–75° and ~100–135°. In the majority of cases, the largest W res was observed at the DF and immediately behind it, while in the DFB the W res decreased. The sources of the majority of whistler bursts were not confined near the neutral plane but could be extended into the PS where the perpendicular anisotropy of the local electron distribution provided the positive growth rate of the whistler waves. We show that the observed whistler waves play a significant role in the dynamics of electron velocity distribution in DFs, leading to energy exchange between various parts of electron population and constraining temperature anisotropy of electron distribution.

Topics & Concepts

WhistlerPhysicsElectronAnisotropyAtomic physicsComputational physicsOpticsNuclear physicsIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsEarthquake Detection and AnalysisSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics