Occurrence of EMIC waves and plasmaspheric plasmas derived from THEMIS observations in the outer magnetosphere: Revisit

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Abstract

We have statistically studied the relationship between electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves and cold plasmaspheric plasma (Nsp) in the L range of 6–12 using the Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS) data for 2008–2011. The important observational results are as follows: (1) Under quiet geomagnetic conditions (Kp ≤ 1), the maximum occurrence rate of the hydrogen (H) band EMIC waves appears in the early morning sector (0600–0900 MLT) at the outermost region (L= 10–12). (2) Under moderate and disturbed conditions (Kp ≥ 2), the H-band occurrence rate is higher in the morning-to-early-afternoon sector for L > 10. (3) The high-occurrence region of helium (He) band waves for Kp ≤ 1 varies from L = 7 to 12 in radial distances along the local time (i.e., at L ∼ 7 near noon and at L= 8–12 near late afternoon). (4) The He-band waves for Kp ≥ 2 are mainly localized between 1200 and 1800 MLT with a peak around 1500–1600 MLT at L= 8–10. (5) Nsp is much higher for the He-band intervals than for the H-band intervals by a factor of 10 or more. The He-band high occurrence appears at a steep Nsp gradient region. (6) The morning-afternoon asymmetry of the normalized frequency seen both in H-band and He-band is similar to the asymmetric distribution of Nsp along the local time. These observations indicate that the cold plasma density plays a significant role in determining the spectral properties of EMIC waves. We discuss whether a morning-afternoon asymmetry of the EMIC wave properties can be explained by the spatial distribution of cold plasmaspheric plasma.

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Kim, G. J., Kim, K. H., Lee, D. H., Kwon, H. J., & Park, J. S. (2016). Occurrence of EMIC waves and plasmaspheric plasmas derived from THEMIS observations in the outer magnetosphere: Revisit. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 121(10), 9443–9458. https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JA023108

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