Whistler wave interactions with superthermal electrons on Martian crustal magnetic fields: Bounce averaged diffusion coefficients and timescales

Author(s):  
Alexander Shane ◽  
Michael Liemohn
1983 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 859 ◽  
Author(s):  
HA Blevin ◽  
MJ Brennan

Expressions are derived for the electron concentration in Townsend discharges in the presence of a transverse magnetic field for both steady state and pulsed conditions. These results indicate that the two components of the electron drift velocity and the four diffusion coefficients required to describe the concentration distribution can be determined by observation of photons emitted from the discharge.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 2583-2598 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Sarris ◽  
X. Li ◽  
M. Temerin

Abstract. In the present work, a test particle simulation is performed in a model of analytic Ultra Low Frequency, ULF, perturbations in the electric and magnetic fields of the Earth's magnetosphere. The goal of this work is to examine if the radial transport of energetic particles in quiet-time ULF magnetospheric perturbations of various azimuthal mode numbers can be described as a diffusive process and be approximated by theoretically derived radial diffusion coefficients. In the model realistic compressional electromagnetic field perturbations are constructed by a superposition of a large number of propagating electric and consistent magnetic pulses. The diffusion rates of the electrons under the effect of the fluctuating fields are calculated numerically through the test-particle simulation as a function of the radial coordinate L in a dipolar magnetosphere; these calculations are then compared to the symmetric, electromagnetic radial diffusion coefficients for compressional, poloidal perturbations in the Earth's magnetosphere. In the model the amplitude of the perturbation fields can be adjusted to represent realistic states of magnetospheric activity. Similarly, the azimuthal modulation of the fields can be adjusted to represent different azimuthal modes of fluctuations and the contribution to radial diffusion from each mode can be quantified. Two simulations of quiet-time magnetospheric variability are performed: in the first simulation, diffusion due to poloidal perturbations of mode number m=1 is calculated; in the second, the diffusion rates from multiple-mode (m=0 to m=8) perturbations are calculated. The numerical calculations of the diffusion coefficients derived from the particle orbits are found to agree with the corresponding theoretical estimates of the diffusion coefficient within a factor of two.


2000 ◽  
Vol 49 (11) ◽  
pp. 2180
Author(s):  
CHEN ZHENG-LIN ◽  
ZHANG JIE

1975 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 101 ◽  
Author(s):  
DB Melrose

Three-wave interactions in which one of the waves is a whistler and the other two are higher frequency waves are examined. The suggestion by Chiu (1970) and Chin (1972) that radio emission near the fundamental plasma frequency might arise in the solar corona from the coalescence of a whistler wave with a Langmuir wave is shown to be unacceptable because the resonance condition for the three-wave interaction cannot be satisfied.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 751-760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Q. Ma ◽  
B. Ni ◽  
X. Tao ◽  
R. M. Thorne

Abstract. We present a detailed numerical study on the effects of a non-dipole magnetic field on the Earth's plasma sheet electron distribution and its implication for diffuse auroral precipitation. Use of the modified bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck equation developed in the companion paper by Ni et al. (2012) for 2-D non-dipole magnetic fields suggests that we can adopt a numerical scheme similar to that used for a dipole field, but should evaluate bounce-averaged diffusion coefficients and bounce period related terms in non-dipole magnetic fields. Focusing on nightside whistler-mode chorus waves at L = 6, and using various Dungey magnetic models, we calculate and compare of the bounce-averaged diffusion coefficients in each case. Using the Alternative Direction Implicit (ADI) scheme to numerically solve the 2-D Fokker-Planck diffusion equation, we demonstrate that chorus driven resonant scattering causes plasma sheet electrons to be scattered much faster into loss cone in a non-dipole field than a dipole. The electrons subject to such scattering extends to lower energies and higher equatorial pitch angles when the southward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) increases in the Dungey magnetic model. Furthermore, we find that changes in the diffusion coefficients are the dominant factor responsible for variations in the modeled temporal evolution of plasma sheet electron distribution. Our study demonstrates that the effects of realistic ambient magnetic fields need to be incorporated into both the evaluation of resonant diffusion coefficients and the calculation of Fokker-Planck diffusion equation to understand quantitatively the evolution of plasma sheet electron distribution and the occurrence of diffuse aurora, in particular at L > 5 during geomagnetically disturbed periods when the ambient magnetic field considerably deviates from a magnetic dipole.


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