TY - JOUR
T1 - An event study on broadband electric field noises and electron distributions in the lunar wake boundary
AU - Nishino, Masaki N.
AU - Kasahara, Yoshiya
AU - Harada, Yuki
AU - Saito, Yoshifumi
AU - Tsunakawa, Hideo
AU - Kumamoto, Atsushi
AU - Yokota, Shoichiro
AU - Takahashi, Futoshi
AU - Matsushima, Masaki
AU - Shibuya, Hidetoshi
AU - Shimizu, Hisayoshi
AU - Miyashita, Yukinaga
AU - Goto, Yoshitaka
AU - Ono, Takayuki
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Numbers 21740359 and 26400477 for MNN.
Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to all members of the SELENE project. The authors gratefully acknowledge the development team of the Space Physics Environment Data Analysis System (SPEDAS) software. The authors also thank the principal investigators of the ACE spacecraft for providing solar wind ion and magnetic field data through CDAWeb at NASA and solar wind strahl electron data through ACE Science Center of California Institute of Technology. The principal investigators of the Wind spacecraft are also acknowledged for providing solar wind plasma and magnetic field data. Hideyuki Usui and Yohei Miyake at Kobe University are acknowledged for providing fruitful discussions. Finally, this Letter is dedicated to the memory of our two colleagues; Prof. Takayuki Ono who passed away in 2013 is acknowledged for his leading the Kaguya/LRS team, and Dr. Yuki Goto who passed away in 2020 is acknowledged for his huge contribution to the development of LRS/WFC-H.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Wave–particle interactions are fundamental processes in space plasma, and some plasma waves, including electrostatic solitary waves (ESWs), are recognised as broadband noises (BBNs) in the electric field spectral data. Spacecraft observations in recent decades have detected BBNs around the Moon, but the generation mechanism of the BBNs is not fully understood. Here, we study a wake boundary traversal with BBNs observed by Kaguya, which includes an ESW event previously reported by Hashimoto et al. Geophys Res Lett 37:L19204 https://doi.org/10.1029/2010GL044529 (2010). Focusing on the relation between BBNs and electron pitch-angle distribution functions, we show that upward electron beams from the nightside lunar surface are effective for the generation of BBNs, in contrast to the original interpretation by Hashimoto et al. Geophys Res Lett 37:L19204 https://doi.org/10.1029/2010GL044529 (2010) that high-energy electrons accelerated by strong ambipolar electric fields excite ESWs in the region far from the Moon. When the BBNs were observed by the Kaguya spacecraft in the wake boundary, the spacecraft’s location was magnetically connected to the nightside lunar surface, and bi-streaming electron distributions of downward-going solar wind strahl component and upward-going field-aligned beams (at ∼ 124 eV) were detected. The interplanetary magnetic field was dominated by a positive BZ (i.e. the northward component), and strahl electrons travelled in the antiparallel direction to the interplanetary magnetic field (i.e. southward), which enabled the strahl electrons to precipitate onto the nightside lunar surface directly. The incident solar wind electrons cause negative charging of the nightside lunar surface, which generates downward electric fields that accelerate electrons from the nightside surface toward higher altitudes along the magnetic field. The bidirectional electron distribution is not a sufficient condition for the BBN generation, and the distribution of upward electron beams seems to be correlated with the BBNs. Ambipolar electric fields in the wake boundary should also contribute to the electron acceleration toward higher altitudes and further intrusion of the solar wind ions into the deeper wake. We suggest that solar wind ion intrusion into the wake boundary is also an important factor that controls the BBN generation by facilitating the influx of solar wind electrons there. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
AB - Wave–particle interactions are fundamental processes in space plasma, and some plasma waves, including electrostatic solitary waves (ESWs), are recognised as broadband noises (BBNs) in the electric field spectral data. Spacecraft observations in recent decades have detected BBNs around the Moon, but the generation mechanism of the BBNs is not fully understood. Here, we study a wake boundary traversal with BBNs observed by Kaguya, which includes an ESW event previously reported by Hashimoto et al. Geophys Res Lett 37:L19204 https://doi.org/10.1029/2010GL044529 (2010). Focusing on the relation between BBNs and electron pitch-angle distribution functions, we show that upward electron beams from the nightside lunar surface are effective for the generation of BBNs, in contrast to the original interpretation by Hashimoto et al. Geophys Res Lett 37:L19204 https://doi.org/10.1029/2010GL044529 (2010) that high-energy electrons accelerated by strong ambipolar electric fields excite ESWs in the region far from the Moon. When the BBNs were observed by the Kaguya spacecraft in the wake boundary, the spacecraft’s location was magnetically connected to the nightside lunar surface, and bi-streaming electron distributions of downward-going solar wind strahl component and upward-going field-aligned beams (at ∼ 124 eV) were detected. The interplanetary magnetic field was dominated by a positive BZ (i.e. the northward component), and strahl electrons travelled in the antiparallel direction to the interplanetary magnetic field (i.e. southward), which enabled the strahl electrons to precipitate onto the nightside lunar surface directly. The incident solar wind electrons cause negative charging of the nightside lunar surface, which generates downward electric fields that accelerate electrons from the nightside surface toward higher altitudes along the magnetic field. The bidirectional electron distribution is not a sufficient condition for the BBN generation, and the distribution of upward electron beams seems to be correlated with the BBNs. Ambipolar electric fields in the wake boundary should also contribute to the electron acceleration toward higher altitudes and further intrusion of the solar wind ions into the deeper wake. We suggest that solar wind ion intrusion into the wake boundary is also an important factor that controls the BBN generation by facilitating the influx of solar wind electrons there. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
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U2 - 10.1186/s40623-021-01566-2
DO - 10.1186/s40623-021-01566-2
M3 - Letter
AN - SCOPUS:85122300976
VL - 74
JO - Earth, Planets and Space
JF - Earth, Planets and Space
SN - 1343-8832
IS - 1
M1 - 9
ER -