Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study

We present a case study of Geotail, Interball-1, IMP-8, and Wind observations of density and magnetic field strength cavities excavated by the enhanced pressures associated with bursts of energetic ions in the foreshock. Consistent with theoretical predictions, the pressure of the energetic ions...

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Main Authors: D. G. Sibeck, K. Kudela, T. Mukai, Z. Nemecek, J. Safrankova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2004-12-01
Series:Annales Geophysicae
Online Access:https://www.ann-geophys.net/22/4143/2004/angeo-22-4143-2004.pdf
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spelling doaj-9d9f866f53314392acbe9964d741c61b2020-11-24T23:45:13ZengCopernicus PublicationsAnnales Geophysicae0992-76891432-05762004-12-01224143415110.5194/angeo-22-4143-2004Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case studyD. G. Sibeck0K. Kudela1T. Mukai2Z. Nemecek3J. Safrankova4NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, 20771, USAInstitute of Experimental Physics Slovak Academy of Sciences, Kosice, SlovakiaInstitute of Space and Astronautical Sciences, Kanagawa, JapanCharles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Prague, Czech RepublicCharles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Prague, Czech RepublicWe present a case study of Geotail, Interball-1, IMP-8, and Wind observations of density and magnetic field strength cavities excavated by the enhanced pressures associated with bursts of energetic ions in the foreshock. Consistent with theoretical predictions, the pressure of the energetic ions diminishes rapidly with upstream distance due to a decrease in the flux of energetic ions and a transition from near-isotropic to streaming pitch angle distributions. Consequently, the cavities can only be observed immediately upstream from the bow shock. A comparison of conditions upstream from the pre- and post-noon bow shock demonstrates that foreshock cavities introduce perturbations into the oncoming solar wind flow with dimensions smaller than those of the magnetosphere. Dayside geosynchronous magnetic field strength variations observed by GOES-8 do not track the density variations seen by any of the spacecraft upstream from the bow shock in a one-to-one manner, indicating that none of these spacecraft observed the precise sequence of density variations that actually struck the subsolar magnetopause.<br><br> <b>Key words.</b> Interplanetary physics (energetic particles; planetary bow shocks) – Magnetospheric physics (solar wind-magnetosphere interactions)https://www.ann-geophys.net/22/4143/2004/angeo-22-4143-2004.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D. G. Sibeck
K. Kudela
T. Mukai
Z. Nemecek
J. Safrankova
spellingShingle D. G. Sibeck
K. Kudela
T. Mukai
Z. Nemecek
J. Safrankova
Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study
Annales Geophysicae
author_facet D. G. Sibeck
K. Kudela
T. Mukai
Z. Nemecek
J. Safrankova
author_sort D. G. Sibeck
title Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study
title_short Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study
title_full Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study
title_fullStr Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study
title_full_unstemmed Radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study
title_sort radial dependence of foreshock cavities: a case study
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Annales Geophysicae
issn 0992-7689
1432-0576
publishDate 2004-12-01
description We present a case study of Geotail, Interball-1, IMP-8, and Wind observations of density and magnetic field strength cavities excavated by the enhanced pressures associated with bursts of energetic ions in the foreshock. Consistent with theoretical predictions, the pressure of the energetic ions diminishes rapidly with upstream distance due to a decrease in the flux of energetic ions and a transition from near-isotropic to streaming pitch angle distributions. Consequently, the cavities can only be observed immediately upstream from the bow shock. A comparison of conditions upstream from the pre- and post-noon bow shock demonstrates that foreshock cavities introduce perturbations into the oncoming solar wind flow with dimensions smaller than those of the magnetosphere. Dayside geosynchronous magnetic field strength variations observed by GOES-8 do not track the density variations seen by any of the spacecraft upstream from the bow shock in a one-to-one manner, indicating that none of these spacecraft observed the precise sequence of density variations that actually struck the subsolar magnetopause.<br><br> <b>Key words.</b> Interplanetary physics (energetic particles; planetary bow shocks) – Magnetospheric physics (solar wind-magnetosphere interactions)
url https://www.ann-geophys.net/22/4143/2004/angeo-22-4143-2004.pdf
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AT znemecek radialdependenceofforeshockcavitiesacasestudy
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