Abstract

AbstractThis paper reports a large‐scale magnetospheric line radiation (MLR) event during a moderate geomagnetic storm on 11 September 2018, which was well recorded by the China‐Seismo‐Electromagnetic Satellite (CSES) in the upper ionosphere. The event shows a symmetrical propagation feature at the conjugated locations between the two hemispheres, exhibiting a large spatial extension roughly from the latitudes 54°N to 53°S. The parallel structures are visible both in the electric and magnetic fields at a frequency band ranging from the local proton cyclotron frequency to ∼1.6 kHz. The wave intensity of parallel spectral lines was primarily enhanced in high latitude regions, gradually weakening at mid‐low latitudes, and then got absorbed in the equatorial region, presenting a distinct V‐shaped structure. The frequency spacings between neighboring spectral lines roughly vary from ∼80 to 110 Hz at the high latitudes and ∼80–130 Hz at the low latitudes, suggesting a slight variation feature with latitude. The parallel spectral structures of MLR drift between ∼0.39 and 0.57 Hz/s at high latitudes and ∼0.18–0.19 Hz/s at low latitudes. The wave vector analysis shows that the MLR waves are right‐hand polarized, obliquely propagating toward the Earth and in the azimuthal direction, where the Poynting flux is primarily oriented perpendicular to the ambient magnetic field. The other large‐scale MLR events all exhibit similar parallel structures and polarization characteristics, suggesting the universality of such a phenomenon. However, the azimuthal angles differ among different events, showing complex features.

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