Affiliation:
1. Space Sciences Laboratory University of California Berkeley CA USA
2. LATMOS‐IPSL‐UVSQ‐CNRS Guyancourt France
3. Laboratoire de Physique des Plasmas UMR7648 CNRS Sorbonne Université Université Paris‐Saclay Observatoire de Paris Ecole Polytechnique Institut Polytechnique de Paris Paris France
4. Royal Institute of Technology Stockholm Sweden
Abstract
AbstractDetailed analysis of a high Mach number quasiperpendicular Earth bow shock crossing by the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft fleet reveal that lower‐hybrid (LH) whistler waves generated in the shock foot region transport energy predominately along the shock surface and slightly toward the shock ramp in the shock normal incidence frame, where wave energy accumulates and is dissipated into the plasma. This suggests the LH whistlers play an integral role in energy reconfiguration at high Mach number collisionless shocks with ramifications to plasma heating. The multipoint observations are used to quantify the wave characteristic parameters (via interferometry), Poynting fluxes, and energy conversion rates D, and to assess their scale dependencies and spatial and temporal properties. The whistler associated energy transport and conversion are found to depend on scale and location within the layer. High‐frequency electrostatic waves yield largest values of D. However, the dominant net energy exchange contribution is from the LH whistlers. In the foot spatially temporally coherent net energy exchange from the plasma to whistlers is observed, whereas deeper in the ramp net wave energy dissipation to the plasma is observed exhibiting significant space‐time variability. These results are consistent with the modified two stream instability driven by the relative drift between reflected ions and electrons as the mechanism for wave growth in the foot. Owing to strong electron heating, whistler energy dissipation in the ramp is attributed to Landau damping, which out‐competes the destabilizing effect of the reflected ion and electron drift.
Funder
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
National Science Foundation
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)