Adiabatic Heating of Electrons in the Magnetospheric Current Sheet
- Autores: Lukin A.S.1,2,3, Yushkov E.V.1,2, Artemyev A.V.2,4, Petrukovich A.A.2
- 
							Afiliações: 
							- Department of Physics
- Space Research Institute
- Faculty of Physics
- Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA
 
- Edição: Volume 44, Nº 6 (2018)
- Páginas: 559-567
- Seção: Space Plasma
- URL: https://journal-vniispk.ru/1063-780X/article/view/186785
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063780X18060065
- ID: 186785
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Resumo
Electron dynamics and acceleration in an electromagnetic field configuration modeling the current sheet configuration of the Earth’s magnetotail region is investigated. A focus is made on the role of the dawn−dusk magnetic field component By in the convection electron heating by an electric field Ey. For numerical integration of a large number of test particle trajectories over long time intervals, the equations of motion written in the guiding center approximation are used. It is shown that the presence of a By ≠ 0 magnetic field significantly changes the electron heating and allows electrons with small pitch angles to gain energy much more efficiently than the equatorial electrons. As a result, the convection heating in the current sheet with By ≠ 0 leads to the formation of an accelerated anisotropic population of particles with energies higher than a few hundred electronvolts. The obtained results and spacecraft observations in the Earth’s magnetotail are compared, and possible limitations in the proposed model approaches are discussed.
Sobre autores
A. Lukin
Department of Physics; Space Research Institute; Faculty of Physics
							Autor responsável pela correspondência
							Email: as.lukin.phys@gmail.com
				                					                																			                												                	Rússia, 							Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 117997; Moscow, 105066						
E. Yushkov
Department of Physics; Space Research Institute
														Email: as.lukin.phys@gmail.com
				                					                																			                												                	Rússia, 							Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 117997						
A. Artemyev
Space Research Institute; Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, UCLA
														Email: as.lukin.phys@gmail.com
				                					                																			                												                	Rússia, 							Moscow, 117997; California						
A. Petrukovich
Space Research Institute
														Email: as.lukin.phys@gmail.com
				                					                																			                												                	Rússia, 							Moscow, 117997						
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