Abstract
We present imaging and high resolution energy spectra of energetic ∼5–90 keV neutral atoms (ENA) of a weak geomagnetic substorm (Dst > −8 nT and AE ≲ 200 nT), made by the Suprathermal Electron (STE) instrument on the STEREO B spacecraft. Enhanced ENA emissions were observed coming from around local midnight near the equator with different spatial distribution and/or temporal behavior at ∼5–20keV compared to ∼20–90 keV. By forward modeling using a parameterized ring‐current model, we show that the ENA images imply the parent equatorial protons have pitch‐angle distributions peaked at 90°, an energy spectrum consistent with in situ proton measurements at geosynchronous orbit, and a spatial asymmetry with the maximum flux at midnight for 5–20 keV and at 2240 MLT for 20–90 keV. These are the first ENA measurements at ∼5 to 26 keV from low altitude, and the first for such weak activity.
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