Abstract
The Earth’s outer radiation belt has long received considerable attention mainly
because the MeV electron flux in the belt varies often dramatically and at various time
scales. It is now widely accepted that the wave-particle interaction is one of the major
mechanisms responsible for such flux variations. The wave-particle interaction can
accelerate electrons to MeV energies, explaining the observed flux increase events, and
can also scatter the electrons’ motion into the loss cone, resulting in atmospheric
precipitation and thus contributing to flux dropouts. In this paper, we provide a review
of the current state of research on relativistic electron scattering and precipitation
due to the interaction with electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves in the inner
magnetosphere. The review is intended to cover progress made over the last ~15 years in
the theory and simulations of various issues, including quasilinear resonance diffusion,
nonlinear interactions, nonresonant interactions, effects of finite normal angle on
pitch angle scattering, effects due to rising tone emission, and ways to scatter
near-equatorial pitch angle electrons. The review concludes with suggestions of a few
promising topics for future research.
Publisher
The Korean Space Science Society
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
3 articles.
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