Simultaneous Observations of Lower Band Chorus Emissions at the Equator and Microburst Precipitating Electrons in the Ionosphere

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Abstract

On 11 December 2016 at 00:12:30 UT, Van Allen Probe-B, at the equator and near midnight, and AC6-B, in the ionosphere, were on magnetic field lines whose 100 km altitude foot points were separated by 600 km. Van Allen Probe-B observed a 30 s burst of lower band chorus waves (with maximum amplitudes >1 nT) at the same time that AC6-B observed intense microburst electrons in the loss cone. One second averaged variations of the chorus intensity and the microburst electron flux were well correlated. The low-altitude electron flux expected from quasi-linear diffusion of the equatorial electrons by the equatorial chorus is in excellent agreement with the observed, 1 s averaged, low-altitude electron flux. However, the large-amplitude, <0.5 s duration, low-altitude electron pulses require nonlinear processes for their explanation.

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Mozer, F. S., Agapitov, O. V., Blake, J. B., & Vasko, I. Y. (2018). Simultaneous Observations of Lower Band Chorus Emissions at the Equator and Microburst Precipitating Electrons in the Ionosphere. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(2), 511–516. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GL076120

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