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The Formation of Electron Heat Flux in the Region of Diffuse Aurora

G. V. Khazanov, A. Glocer, Mike Chu

2020Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics19 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Whistler and electrostatic electron cyclotron harmonics waves are responsible for scattering and precipitating the energetic plasma sheet electrons that drive the diffuse aurora. These primary electrons with energies in the kiloelectron volt range, simultaneously precipitating in magnetically conjugate regions, produce the secondary electron population and can be reflected by the atmosphere back through the magnetosphere and precipitate into the conjugate region with additional follow‐up atmospheric backscatter. Primary, degraded, and secondary electrons can be trapped back into the magnetosphere as they travel back and forth between the two magnetically conjugate ionospheres and continuously delivering their energy to the cold plasma sheet electrons and form the electron thermal fluxes that deposit this energy at the upper ionospheric altitudes. We consider the formation of these heat fluxes focusing on the magnetosphere‐ionosphere energy interplay of the entire superthermal electron spectra from 1 eV up to 10 keV and discuss the efficiency of the different spectral energy intervals that contribute to the electron plasma heating at the magnetospheric altitudes. Our parametric studies at L = 6.8, with lower and upper band chorus whistler wave amplitudes of 10 pT and electron cyclotron harmonic wave amplitudes of 1 mVm −1 , indicate the dominant role of the whistler mode in the formation of the electron heat flux coming from the magnetosphere to the ionosphere.

Topics & Concepts

MagnetosphereWhistlerPhysicsElectronIonosphereAtomic physicsElectron precipitationPlasmaspherePlasma sheetPlasmaGeophysicsNuclear physicsIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsSolar and Space Plasma DynamicsEarthquake Detection and Analysis
The Formation of Electron Heat Flux in the Region of Diffuse Aurora | Litcius