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Determining the Global Scale Size of Chorus Waves in the Magnetosphere

Shuai Zhang, I. J. Rae, C. E. J. Watt, A. W. Degeling, Anmin Tian, Quanqi Shi, Xiaochen Shen, Shutao Yao, Ruilong Guo, Mengmeng Wang, Xiaoqiong Zhu, Huizi Wang

2021Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Chorus waves outside the plasmapause influence the Earth's radiation belt dynamics by interacting with energetic electrons via cyclotron and Landau resonance. Recent numerical diffusion experiments indicate that the diffusion process is sensitive to the spatial and temporal scale of variability in the wave‐particle interaction, which is reported to be more efficient than that based on the traditional average model. Using Van Allen Probes A and B data from November 2012 to July 2019, the spatial and temporal scale size of chorus waves are calculated by the correlation between the wave amplitudes detected by two satellites with varying spatial separation or time lag. We found that, the chorus wave is incoherent when the spatial extent is greater than 433 km or the time lag lasts ∼10 s, which are significantly smaller than that of plasmaspheric hiss. In addition, the spatial correlations of chorus tend to be higher near noon or with lower geomagnetic activity. The temporal correlations of chorus are always statistically near zero, which are not influenced by the location and geomagnetic activity. Our results can help refine the model of the interactions between energetic particles and chorus waves in the radiation belt.

Topics & Concepts

ChorusVan Allen radiation beltPlasmaspherePhysicsMagnetosphereHissEarth's magnetic fieldComputational physicsAmplitudeGeophysicsLocal timeVan Allen ProbesDiffusionElectronMagnetic fieldOpticsNuclear physicsThermodynamicsMathematicsLiteratureQuantum mechanicsStatisticsArtIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamicsEarthquake Detection and AnalysisGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
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