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Simulation study on parametric dependence of whistler-mode hiss generation in the plasmasphere

Authors :
Mitsuru Hikishima
Yoshiharu Omura
Yin Liu
Source :
Earth, Planets and Space, Vol 73, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SpringerOpen, 2021.

Abstract

We conduct electromagnetic particle simulations to examine the applicability of nonlinear wave growth theory to the generation process of plasmaspheric hiss. We firstly vary the gradient of the background magnetic field from a realistic model to a rather steep gradient model. Under such variation, the threshold amplitude in the nonlinear theory increases quickly and the overlap between threshold and optimum amplitude disappears correspondingly, the nonlinear process is suppressed. In the simulations, as we enlarge the gradient coefficient of the background magnetic field, waves generated near the equator do not grow through propagation. By examining the range of suitable values of inhomogeneity factor S (i.e., $$|S| | S | < 2 ), we find the generation of wave packets is limited to the equatorial region when the background field is steep, showing a good agreement with what is indicated by critical distance in the theory. We then check the dependence of generation of hiss emissions on different hot electron densities. Since the overlap between threshold and optimum amplitude vanishes, the nonlinear process is weakened when hot electron density becomes smaller. In the simulation results, we find similar wave structures in all density cases, yet with different magnitudes. The existence of suitable S values implies that the nonlinear process occurs even at a low level of hot electron density. However, by examining $$J_E$$ J E that closely relates to the wave growth, we find energy conveyed from particles to waves is much limited in small density cases. Therefore, the nonlinear process is suppressed when hot electron density is small, which agrees with the theoretical analysis. Graphical Abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18805981
Volume :
73
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Earth, Planets and Space
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fc4f7a86d4f5e26b08090cb949deaed