Abstract

Abstract. This paper is related to the propagation characteristics of a chorus emission recorded simultaneously by the 4 satellites of the CLUSTER mission on 29 October 2001 between 01:00 and 05:00 UT. During this day, the spacecraft (SC) 1, 2, and 4 are relatively close to each other but SC3 has been delayed by half an hour. We use the data recorded aboard CLUSTER by the STAFF spectrum analyser. This instrument provides the cross spectral matrix of three magnetic and two electric field components. Dedicated software processes this spectral matrix in order to determine the wave normal directions relative to the Earth’s magnetic field. This calculation is done for the 4 satellites at different times and different frequencies and allows us to check the directions of these waves. Measurements around the magnetic equator show that the parallel component of the Poynting vector changes its sign when the satellites cross the equator region. It indicates that the chorus waves propagate away from this region which is considered as the source area of these emissions. This is valid for the most intense waves observed on the magnetic and electric power spectrograms. But it is also observed on SC1, SC2, and SC4 that lower intensity waves propagate toward the equator simultaneously with the SC3 intense chorus waves propagating away from the equator. Both waves are at the same frequency. Using the wave normal directions of these waves, a ray tracing study shows that the waves observed by SC1, SC2, and SC4 cross the equatorial plane at the same location as the waves observed by SC3. SC3 which is 30 minutes late observes the waves that originate first from the equator; meanwhile, SC1, SC2, and SC4 observe the same waves that have suffered a Lower Hybrid Resonance (LHR) reflection at low altitudes (based on the ray tracing analysis) and now return to the equator at a different location with a lower intensity. Similar phenomenon is observed when all SC are on the other side of the equator. The intensity ratio between magnetic waves coming directly from the equator and waves returning to the equator is between 0.005 and 0.01, which is in agreement with previously published theoretical calculation of the growth rates with the particle distribution seen by GEOS.Key words. Magnetospheric physics (plasma waves and instabilities) – Ionosphere (wave propagation) – Radio science (magnetospheric physics)

Highlights

  • Chorus waves are one of the most intense emissions observed in the outer magnetosphere

  • Parrot et al (2003) have shown that during moderate magnetic activity, the source of the emissions is located at the magnetic equator when this equator is determined by the minimum of the in situ measured magnetic field

  • The inputs of this software are the CLUSTER data CD-ROMs provided by ESA, the CSDS (CLUSTER Science Data System) Prime Parameters (PP) of FGM (Flux Gate Magnetometer) for the local magnetic field (Balogh et al, 1997), and the CSDS Summary Parameters of auxiliary data (Daly, 2002)

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Summary

Introduction

Chorus waves are one of the most intense emissions observed in the outer magnetosphere They are detected near the equatorial plane and they are characterised by a sequence of discrete elements (rising and falling tones) with a time separation between 0.1 and 1 s. They are generated by the injection of substorm electrons (Tsurutani and Smith, 1974; Tsurutani et al, 1979; Meredith et al, 2001) through the loss cone instability (Kennel and Petschek, 1966) It has been indirectly shown (Dunkel and Helliwell, 1969; Burtis and Helliwell, 1969; Burton and Holzer, 1974; Tsurutani and Smith, 1977) that the chorus emissions are generated near the magnetic equator.

The wave experiment
The data processing software
Detailed analysis of the event recorded by CLUSTER
Discussions and conclusion
Full Text
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