Abstract

Abstract. Electrostatic Solitary Waves (ESWs) have been observed by several spacecraft in the current layers of Earth's magnetosphere since 1982. ESWs are manifested as isolated pulses (one wave period) in the high time resolution waveform data obtained on these spacecraft. They are thus nonlinear structures generated out of nonlinear instabilities and processes. We report the first observations of ESWs associated with the onset of a super-substorm that occurred on 24 August 2005 while the Cluster spacecraft were located in the magnetotail at around 18–19 RE and moving northward from the plasma sheet to the lobes. These ESWs were detected in the waveform data of the WBD plasma wave receiver on three of the Cluster spacecraft. The majority of the ESWs were detected about 5 min after the super-substorm onset during which time 1) the PEACE electron instrument detected significant field-aligned electron fluxes from a few 100 eV to 3.5 keV, 2) the EDI instrument detected bursts of field-aligned electron currents, 3) the FGM instrument detected substantial magnetic fluctuations and the presence of Alfvén waves, 4) the STAFF experiment detected broadband electric and magnetic waves, ion cyclotron waves and whistler mode waves, and 5) CIS detected nearly comparable densities of H+ and O+ ions and a large tailward H+ velocity. We compare the characteristics of the ESWs observed during this event to those created in the laboratory at the University of California-Los Angeles Plasma Device (LAPD) with an electron beam. We find that the time durations of both space and LAPD ESWs are only slightly larger than the respective local electron plasma periods, indicating that electron, and not ion, dynamics are responsible for generation of the ESWs. We have discussed possible mechanisms for generating the ESWs in space, including the beam and kinetic Buneman type instabilities and the acoustic instabilities. Future studies will examine these mechanisms in more detail using the space measurements as inputs to models, and better relate the ESW space measurements to the laboratory through PIC code models.

Highlights

  • Substorms at Earth (Akasofu, 1964) have been the subject of intense research for many years

  • We investigate a process involving nonlinear microphysics and the generation of Electrostatic Solitary Waves (ESWs) associated with the onset of a super-substorm that occurred on 24 August 2005 during the main phase of a severe magnetic storm

  • The primary focus of this investigation is nonlinear Electrostatic Solitary Waves (ESWs) observed shortly after super-substorm onset, with comparison to ESWs observed in recently-conducted laboratory experiments at the University of California-Los Angeles plasma device (LAPD)

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Summary

Introduction

Substorms at Earth (Akasofu, 1964) have been the subject of intense research for many years. Super-substorms are intense substorms that show evidence of external triggering (Zhou and Tsurutani, 2001; Tsurutani and Zhou, 2003). We investigate a process involving nonlinear microphysics and the generation of Electrostatic Solitary Waves (ESWs) associated with the onset of a super-substorm that occurred on 24 August 2005 during the main phase of a severe magnetic storm. The purpose of the present study is not to investigate in detail the super-substorm itself, but rather to discuss the effects of that super-substorm on physical processes in the magnetotail. In the present study we use data from the four Cluster spacecraft, which were located in the magnetotail at 18–19 RE, ∼01:00 Magnetic Local Time and −10 to −12 degrees Solar Magnetic latitude, to investigate the physical processes observed at Cluster’s location in association with the supersubstorm onset. The primary focus of this investigation is nonlinear Electrostatic Solitary Waves (ESWs) observed shortly after super-substorm onset, with comparison to ESWs observed in recently-conducted laboratory experiments at the University of California-Los Angeles plasma device (LAPD)

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