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Interpreting ~1 Hz magnetic compressional waves in Mercury's inner magnetosphere in terms of propagating ion‐Bernstein waves

Authors :
Jim M. Raines
Brian J. Anderson
David Schriver
Scott A. Boardsen
Haje Korth
Daniel J. Gershman
James A. Slavin
Eun-Hwa Kim
Torbjörn Sundberg
Pavel M. Trávníček
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 120:4213-4228
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2015.

Abstract

We show that ~1 Hz magnetic compressional waves observed in Mercury's inner magnetosphere could be interpreted as ion-Bernstein waves in a moderate proton beta ~0.1 plasma. An observation of a proton distribution with a large planetary loss cone is presented, and we show that this type of distribution is highly unstable to the generation of ion-Bernstein waves with low magnetic compression. Ray tracing shows that as these waves propagate back and forth about the magnetic equator; they cycle between a state of low and high magnetic compression. The group velocity decreases during the high-compression state leading to a pileup of compressional wave energy, which could explain the observed dominance of the highly compressional waves. This bimodal nature is due to the complexity of the index of refraction surface in a warm plasma whose upper branch has high growth rate with low compression, and its lower branch has low growth/damping rate with strong compression. Two different cycles are found: one where the compression maximum occurs at the magnetic equator and one where the compression maximum straddles the magnetic equator. The later cycle could explain observations where the maximum in compression straddles the equator. Ray tracing shows that this mode is confined within ±12° magnetic latitude which can account for the bulk of the observations. We show that the Doppler shift can account for the difference between the observed and model wave frequency, if the wave vector direction is in opposition to the plasma flow direction. We note that the Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin approximation breaks down during the pileup of compressional energy and that a study involving full wave solutions is required.

Details

ISSN :
21699402 and 21699380
Volume :
120
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3aa39abe52debd9f3615bbfc495466c8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/2014ja020910