Xiaofei Shi

and 6 more

Energetic electron precipitation to the Earth’s atmosphere is a key process controlling radiation belt dynamics and magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling. One of the main drivers of precipitation is electron resonant scattering by whistler-mode waves. Low-altitude observations of such precipitation often reveal quasi-periodicity in the ultra-low-frequency (ULF) range associated with whistler-mode waves, causally linked to ULF-modulated equatorial electron flux and its anisotropy. Conjunctions between ground-based instruments and equatorial spacecraft show that low-altitude precipitation concurrent with equatorial whistler-mode waves also exhibits a spatial periodicity as a function of latitude over a large spatial region. Whether this spatial periodicity might also be due to magnetospheric ULF waves spatially modulating electron fluxes and whistler-mode chorus has not been previously addressed due to a lack of conjunctions between equatorial spacecraft, LEO spacecraft, and ground-based instruments. To examine this question, we combine ground-based and equatorial observations magnetically conjugate to observations of precipitation at the low-altitude, polar-orbiting CubeSats ELFIN-A and -B. As they sequentially cross the outer radiation belt with a temporal separation of minutes to tens of minutes, they can easily reveal the spatial quasi-periodicity of electron precipitation. Our combined datasets confirm that ULF waves may modulate whistler-mode wave generation within a large MLT and $L$-shell domain in the equatorial magnetosphere, and thus lead to significant aggregate energetic electron precipitation exhibiting both temporal and spatial periodicity. Our results suggest that the coupling between ULF and whistler-mode waves is important for outer radiation belt dynamics.

Oleksiy Agapitov

and 6 more

The spatial scales of whistler-mode waves, determined by their generation process, propagation, and damping, are important for assessing the scaling and efficiency of wave-particle interactions affecting the dynamics of the radiation belts. We use multi-point wave measurements by two Van Allen Probes in 2013-2019 covering all MLTs at L=2-6 to investigate the spatial extent of active regions of chorus and hiss waves, their wave amplitude distribution in the source/generation region, and the scales of chorus wave packets, employing a time-domain correlation technique to the spacecraft approaches closer than 1000 km, which happened every 70 days in 2012-2018 and every 35 days in 2018-2019. The correlation of chorus wave power dynamics using is found to remain significant up to inter-spacecraft separations of 400 km to 750 km transverse to the background magnetic field direction, consistent with previous estimates of the chorus wave packet extent. Our results further suggest that the chorus source region can be slightly asymmetrical, more elongated in either the azimuthal or radial direction, which could also explain the aforementioned two different scales. An analysis of average chorus and hiss wave amplitudes at separate locations similarly shows the reveals different radial and azimuthal extents of the corresponding wave active regions, complementing previous results based on THEMIS spacecraft statistics mainly at larger L>6. Both the chorus source region scale and the chorus active region size appear smaller inside the outer radiation belt (at L< 6) than at higher L-shells.