Plasma waves in the dayside polar cap boundary layer: Bipolar and monopolar electric pulses and whistler mode waves

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Abstract

We report four different types of plasma waves detected in and near the dayside polar cap boundary layer (PCBL) region at high altitudes (> 6 R(E)). One wave type is narrowband whistler-mode emission at frequencies just below f(ce) (5.5 kHz). These emissions could be locally generated by resonant wave-particle interactions involving an electron beam of ~100 eV energy. A second type is a low frequency (200-300 Hz) whistler mode wave, which may be locally generated by ~25 keV electrons or ~45 keV ions. It is also possible that these latter waves are generated at low altitudes near the ionosphere and then converted from the ion cyclotron mode into whistler-mode during propagation from the generation region to the spacecraft. Two further types of waves are large-amplitude bipolar and monopolar solitary 'electrostatic' waves. The bipolar wave structures are possibly generated all along the magnetic field lines in the field-aligned current regions (at all local times). The monopolar structures could be evolved bipolar solitary waves. A one-d schematic is presented to explain the paired monopolar structures as a result of splitting of an electron hole into two parts.

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Tsurutani, B. T., Arballo, J. K., Lakhina, G. S., Ho, C. M., Buti, B., Pickett, J. S., & Gurnett, D. A. (1998). Plasma waves in the dayside polar cap boundary layer: Bipolar and monopolar electric pulses and whistler mode waves. Geophysical Research Letters, 25(22), 4117–4120. https://doi.org/10.1029/1998GL900114

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