Formation of 30 KeV Proton Isotropic Boundaries During Geomagnetic Storms

We study the origin of the 30 keV proton isotropic boundary (IB) in the nightside auroral zone during geomagnetic storms, particularly, to address the recent results that the adiabaticity parameter K (ratio of the magnetic field line curvature radius to the particle gyroradius at the equator) on the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geophysical research. Space physics 2018-05, Vol.123 (5), p.3436-3459
Hauptverfasser: Dubyagin, S., Ganushkina, N. Yu, Sergeev, V.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We study the origin of the 30 keV proton isotropic boundary (IB) in the nightside auroral zone during geomagnetic storms, particularly, to address the recent results that the adiabaticity parameter K (ratio of the magnetic field line curvature radius to the particle gyroradius at the equator) on the IB field line can be much larger comparing to its theoretical estimate K ∼ 8 for the field line curvature (FLC) scattering mechanism. During nine storms in 2011–2013, we investigate ∼2,000 IBs observed by low‐altitude Polar Operational Environmental Satellites (POES) satellites and apply the TS05 magnetospheric model to estimate the K value in the equatorial part of the IB field line. The statistical distribution of the estimated K parameter, while being rather broad, is centered on K = 9–13. For smaller subset of ∼250 IBs, the concurrent magnetic field measurements on board Time History of Events and Macroscale Interaction During Substorms probes in the equatorial magnetotail were used to correct the estimated K‐values accounting for the TS05 deviations from the real magnetic configuration. After correction, the K distribution becomes narrower, being still centered on K = 9–12. Different estimates give percentages of events with K < 13, which can be attributed to IBs formed by FLC scattering, between 60% and 80%. Finally, we have not found any dependence of the K distribution on magnetic local time and IB latitude, except for events with IB located at extremely low latitudes (
ISSN:2169-9380
2169-9402
DOI:10.1002/2017JA024587