Slow electron holes in the Earth's bow shock

Author:

Kamaletdinov S. R.12ORCID,Vasko I. Y.13ORCID,Wang R.3ORCID,Artemyev A. V.14ORCID,Yushkov E. V.1ORCID,Mozer F. S.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 117997, Russia

2. Faculty of Physics, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow 101000, Russia

3. Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720, USA

4. Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA

Abstract

We present analysis of about one hundred bipolar structures of positive polarity identified in ten quasi-perpendicular crossings of the Earth's bow shock by the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft. The bipolar structures have amplitudes up to a few tenths of local electron temperature, spatial scales of a few local Debye lengths, and plasma frame speeds of the order of local ion-acoustic speed. We argue that the bipolar structures of positive polarity are slow electron holes, rather than ion-acoustic solitons. The electron holes are typically above the transverse instability threshold, which we argue is due to high values of the ratio [Formula: see text] between electron plasma and cyclotron frequencies. We speculate that the transverse instability can strongly limit the lifetime of the electron holes, whose amplitude is above a certain threshold, which is only a few mV/m in the Earth's bow shock. We suggest that electron surfing acceleration by large-amplitude electron holes reported in numerical simulations of high-Mach number shocks might not be as efficient in realistic shocks, because the transverse instability strongly limits the lifetime of large-amplitude electron holes at [Formula: see text] values typical of collisionless shocks in nature.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Goddard Space Flight Center

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Condensed Matter Physics

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