Dipolarization fronts are typically observed with a density gradient of scale size comparable to an ion gyroradius, which naturally results in an ambipolar electric field in the direction of the gradient. Prevailing models ignore this ambipolar electric field, the separation of ion and electron scale physics, and consequent non-Maxwellian plasma distributions with strong spatial gradients in velocity, all of which we investigate in this paper. We examine two dipolarization front events observed by the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission (one with low plasma beta, one with high plasma beta), develop a rigorous kinetic equilibrium for dipolarization fronts, analyze the linear stability, and explore the nonlinear evolution and observable signatures with kinetic simulations. There are two major drivers of instability in the lower-hybrid frequency range: the density gradient (lower-hybrid drift instability) and the velocity shear (electron-ion hybrid instability). We argue the electron-ion hybrid mode is dominant, and consequently a dipolarization front approaches a steady or saturated state through the emission of waves that relax the velocity shear. A key aspect of these shear-driven waves is a broadband frequency spectrum that is consistent with satellite observation.
CITATION STYLE
Fletcher, A. C., Crabtree, C., Ganguli, G., Malaspina, D., Tejero, E., & Chu, X. (2019). Kinetic Equilibrium and Stability Analysis of Dipolarization Fronts. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 124(3), 2010–2028. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JA026433
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