Litcius/Paper detail

Electron Precipitation Observed by ELFIN Using Proton Precipitation as a Proxy for Electromagnetic Ion Cyclotron (EMIC) Waves

Luisa Capannolo, Wen Li, Qianli Ma, Murong Qin, Xiaochen Shen, V. Angelopoulos, Anton Artemyev, Xiao‐Jia Zhang, Miroslav Hanzelka

2023Geophysical Research Letters55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves can drive radiation belt depletion and Low‐Earth Orbit satellites can detect the resulting electron and proton precipitation. The ELFIN (Electron Losses and Fields InvestigatioN) CubeSats provide an excellent opportunity to study the properties of EMIC‐driven electron precipitation with much higher energy and pitch‐angle resolution than previously allowed. We collect EMIC‐driven electron precipitation events from ELFIN observations and use POES (Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellites) to search for 10s–100s keV proton precipitation nearby as a proxy of EMIC wave activity. Electron precipitation mainly occurs on localized radial scales (∼0.3 L), over 15–24 MLT and 5–8 L shells, stronger at ∼MeV energies and weaker down to ∼100–200 keV. Additionally, the observed loss cone pitch‐angle distribution agrees with quasilinear predictions at ≳250 keV (more filled loss cone with increasing energy), while additional mechanisms are needed to explain the observed low‐energy precipitation.

Topics & Concepts

Electron precipitationVan Allen radiation beltVan Allen ProbesEmic and eticCyclotronPhysicsPrecipitationProtonPitch anglePolarAtmospheric sciencesElectronIonGeophysicsComputational physicsMagnetosphereNuclear physicsAstronomyMeteorologyPlasmaQuantum mechanicsAnthropologySociologyIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsSolar and Space Plasma DynamicsGNSS positioning and interference
Electron Precipitation Observed by ELFIN Using Proton Precipitation as a Proxy for Electromagnetic Ion Cyclotron (EMIC) Waves | Litcius