Evolution of chorus emissions into plasmaspheric hiss observed by Van Allen Probes

Qinghua Zhou, Fuliang Xiao, Chang Yang, Si Liu, Yihua He, J. R. Wygant, D. N. Baker, H. E. Spence, G. D. Reeves, H. O. Funsten

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

The two classes of whistler mode waves (chorus and hiss) play different roles in the dynamics of radiation belt energetic electrons. Chorus can efficiently accelerate energetic electrons, and hiss is responsible for the loss of energetic electrons. Previous studies have proposed that chorus is the source of plasmaspheric hiss, but this still requires an observational confirmation because the previously observed chorus and hiss emissions were not in the same frequency range in the same time. Here we report simultaneous observations form Van Allen Probes that chorus and hiss emissions occurred in the same range ∼300–1500 Hz with the peak wave power density about 10−5 nT2/Hz during a weak storm on 3 July 2014. Chorus emissions propagate in a broad region outside the plasmapause. Meanwhile, hiss emissions are confined inside the plasmasphere, with a higher intensity and a broader area at a lower frequency. A sum of bi-Maxwellian distribution is used to model the observed anisotropic electron distributions and to evaluate the instability of waves. A three-dimensional ray tracing simulation shows that a portion of chorus emission outside the plasmasphere can propagate into the plasmasphere and evolve into plasmaspheric hiss. Moreover, hiss waves below 1 kHz are more intense and propagate over a broader area than those above 1 kHz, consistent with the observation. The current results can explain distributions of the observed hiss emission and provide a further support for the mechanism of evolution of chorus into hiss emissions.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)4518-4529
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Volume121
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
©2016. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.

Keywords

  • RBSP results
  • chorus waves
  • plasmaspheric hiss

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