Global Distribution of EMIC Waves and Its Association to Subauroral Proton Precipitation During the 27 May 2017 Storm: Modeling and Multipoint Observations

Author:

Shreedevi P. R.12ORCID,Yu Yiqun23ORCID,Miyoshi Yoshizumi1ORCID,Tian Xingbin2ORCID,Zhu Minghui2ORCID,Jordanova Vania K.4ORCID,Nakamura Satoko1,Jun Chae‐Woo1ORCID,Kumar Sandeep1ORCID,Shiokawa Kazuo1ORCID,Connors Martin5ORCID,Hori T.1ORCID,Shoji Masafumi1ORCID,Shinohara I.6ORCID,Yokota S.7ORCID,Kasahara S.8ORCID,Keika K.8ORCID,Matsuoka A.9,Kadokura Akira101112ORCID,Tsuchiya Fuminori13,Kumamoto Atsushi13,Kasahara Yoshiya14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Space‐Earth Environmental Research Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

2. School of Space and Environment Beihang University Beijing China

3. Key Laboratory of Space Environment Monitoring and Information Processing Ministry of Industry and Information Technology Beijing China

4. Space Science and Application Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM USA

5. Athabasca University Athabasca AB Canada

6. ISAS/JAXA Sagamihara Japan

7. Osaka University Toyonaka Japan

8. University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

9. Kyoto University Kyoto Japan

10. Polar Environment Data Science Center ROIS‐DS Tokyo Japan

11. National Institute of Polar Research Tokyo Japan

12. Polar Science Program Graduate Institute for Advanced Studies SOKENDAI Tokyo Japan

13. Tohoku University Sendai Japan

14. Kanazawa University Kanazawa Japan

Abstract

AbstractRecent simulation studies using the RAM‐SCB model showed that proton precipitation contributes significantly to the total energy flux deposited into the subauroral ionosphere thereby affecting the magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling. In this study, we use the BATS‐R‐US + RAM‐SCB model to understand the evolution of ElectroMagnetic Ion Cyclotron (EMIC) waves in the inner magnetosphere, their correspondence to the proton precipitation into the subauroral ionosphere, and to assess the performance of the model in reproducing the EMIC wave‐particle interactions. During the 27 May 2017 storm, Arase and RBSP‐A satellites observed typical signatures of EMIC waves in the inner magnetosphere. Within this interval, Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)/MetOp satellites observed significant proton precipitation in the dusk‐midnight sector. Simulation results show that H‐ and He‐band EMIC waves are excited within regions of strong temperature anisotropy near the plasmapause. The simulated growth rates of EMIC waves show a similar trend to that of the EMIC wave power observed by the Arase and RBSP‐A satellites, suggesting that the model can reproduce the EMIC wave activity qualitatively. The simulated H‐band waves in the dusk sector are stronger than He‐band waves possibly due to the presence of excess protons in the boundary conditions obtained from the BATS‐R‐US code. The precipitating proton fluxes reproduced by the simulation with EMIC waves are found to agree reasonably well with the DMSP and NOAA/MetOp satellite observations. It is suggested that EMIC wave scattering of ring current ions can account for proton precipitation observed by the DMSP and MetOp satellites during the 27 May 2017 storm.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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