Abstract
Equatorial noise, also known magnetosonic waves (MSWs), are one of the frequently
observed plasma waves in Earth’s inner magnetosphere. Observations have shown that wave
amplitudes maximize at the magnetic equator with a narrow extent in their latitudinal
distribution. It has been understood that waves are generated from an equatorial source
region and confined within a few degrees magnetic latitude. The present study
investigates whether the MSW instability and saturation amplitudes maximize at the
equator, given an energetic proton ring-like distribution derived from an observed wave
event, and using linear instability analysis and particle-in-cell simulations with the
plasma conditions at different latitudes along the dipole magnetic field line. The
results show that waves initially grow fastest (i.e., with the largest growth rate) at
high latitude (20°–25°), but consistent with observations, their saturation amplitudes
maximize within ±10° latitude. On the other hand, the slope of the saturation amplitudes
versus latitude revealed in the present study is not as steep as what the previous
statistical observation results suggest. This may be indicative of some other factors
not considered in the present analyses at play, such as background magnetic field and
plasma inhomogeneities and the propagation effect.
Publisher
The Korean Space Science Society
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
2 articles.
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