Observational Evidence for Three Time‐Scale Modulations in the Pulsating Aurora
We report an Arase‐all sky imager (ASI) conjugate event in which the pulsating aurora (PsA) has a one‐to‐one correspondence with chorus bursts. Wavelet analysis displayed three peaks at ∼0.3 Hz, 4 Hz, and >10 Hz, corresponding to the main pulsation, internal modulation, and fast modulation, respe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Geophysical research letters 2024-08, Vol.51 (16), p.n/a |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We report an Arase‐all sky imager (ASI) conjugate event in which the pulsating aurora (PsA) has a one‐to‐one correspondence with chorus bursts. Wavelet analysis displayed three peaks at ∼0.3 Hz, 4 Hz, and >10 Hz, corresponding to the main pulsation, internal modulation, and fast modulation, respectively. These correspond to the old terms of ∼5–15 s pulsations, chorus risers/elements and subelements/subpackets, respectively. Electron “microbursts” correspond to the 4‐Hz peak. The internal and fast modulations are further verified by the analysis based on fast Fourier transform analyses. Moreover, the spatial distributions of the Fourier spectral amplitude show that the internal and fast modulations are well‐structured within auroral patches. The above results indicate a paradigm shift away from quasilinear theory which implicitly assumes diffuse wave generation. The three time‐scale modulations are consistent with coherent chorus which has been theoretically argued to lead to pitch angle transport three orders of magnitude faster.
Plain Language Summary
Pulsating aurora exhibit irregular patches of brightness with quasiperiodic on‐off transitions (∼2–20 s). More rapid modulations, such as internal modulation (∼3–4 Hz) or fast modulation (>10 Hz), have been detected within the pulsation “on” time. However, due to the measurement limitations, the simultaneous observation of three time‐scale modulations has never been reported. In this study, we analyze the conjugate observations of the pulsating aurora (PsA) and chorus recorded by the ground‐based Arase‐all sky imager and the Arase satellite, which demonstrates the coexistence of three time‐scale modulations in the PsA. The spatial distributions of Fourier spectral amplitude show that the internal and fast modulations are well‐structured within the aurora patches. The three time scales of chorus modulation have been previously called chorus 5–15 s pulsations, risers/elements and subelements/subpackets corresponding to the three aurora peaks. This study verifies the existence of internal and fast modulations in PsA, implying an extremely rapid electron loss mechanism. Quasilinear theory cannot explain any of the three time‐scale modulations. The discovery that chorus is coherent and will lead to pitch angle transport 1,000 times faster than diffuse waves is consistent with the fast modulations shown in this paper. A new theory of chorus generation is needed to update that of quasilinear theory.
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ISSN: | 0094-8276 1944-8007 |
DOI: | 10.1029/2024GL108253 |