Abstract

AbstractEarth's foreshock is filled with backstreaming particles that can generate a variety of waves and foreshock transients. According to recent studies, these particles can be further accelerated while being scattered by field fluctuations, including waves, inside foreshock transients, contributing to particle acceleration at the parent bow shock. The properties of these waves and how they interact with particles and affect particle acceleration inside foreshock transients are still unclear, however. Here we take the first step to study one important type of these waves, whistler waves. We use Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS) observations and employ multiple case studies to investigate the properties of whistler waves in the compressional boundaries of foreshock transients where THEMIS wave burst mode is triggered. We show that the whistler waves are quasi parallel propagating with bidirectional Poynting vectors, suggesting that they are locally generated. We focus on how they interact with electrons. We show that the diffusion surfaces for these waves in the electron velocity space match the observed electron phase space density distribution contours better when the modeled pitch angle diffusion coefficients from these waves are higher. We also demonstrate that higher‐energy electrons are more likely to be scattered by whistler waves. Our results suggest that whistler waves are important for scattering tens to hundreds of electronvolt electrons inside foreshock transients and elucidate electron dynamics and whistler wave properties in such environments.

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