Statistical analysis of high-frequency whistler waves at Earth's bow shock: Further support for stochastic shock drift acceleration

Author:

Amano Takanobu1ORCID,Masuda Miki1ORCID,Oka Mitsuo2ORCID,Kitamura Naritoshi3ORCID,Le Contel Olivier4ORCID,Gershman Daniel J.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Science, The University of Tokyo 1 , Tokyo 113-0033, Japan

2. Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California 2 , Berkeley, California 94720, USA

3. Institute for Space-Earth Environmental Research, Nagoya University 3 , Nagoya 464-0601, Japan

4. Laboratoire de Physique des Plasmas, CNRS/Sorbonne Université/Université Paris-Saclay/Observatoire de Paris/Ecole Polytechnique Institut Polytechnique de Paris 4 , Paris 75005, France

5. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center 5 , Greenbelt, Maryland 20771, USA

Abstract

We statistically investigate high-frequency whistler waves (with frequencies higher than ∼10% of the local electron cyclotron frequency) at Earth's bow shock using magnetospheric multi-scale (MMS) spacecraft observations. We focus specifically on the wave power within the shock transition layer, where we expect electron acceleration via stochastic shock drift acceleration (SSDA) to occur associated with efficient pitch-angle scattering by whistler waves. We find that the wave power is positively correlated with both the Alfvén Mach number in the normal incidence frame MA and in the de Hoffmann–Teller frame MA/cos θBn. The empirical relation with MA/cos θBn is compared with the theory of SSDA that predicts a threshold wave power proportional to (MA/cos θBn)−2. The result suggests that the wave power exceeds the theoretical threshold for MA/cos θBn≳30–60, beyond which efficient electron acceleration is expected. This aligns very well with previous statistical analysis of electron acceleration at Earth's bow shock [Oka et al., Geophys. Res. Lett. 33, 5–6 (2006)]. Therefore, we consider that this study provides further support for SSDA as the mechanism of electron acceleration at Earth's bow shock. At higher-Mach-number astrophysical shocks, SSDA will be able to inject electrons into the diffusive shock acceleration process for subsequent acceleration to cosmic-ray energies.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

International Space Science Institute

Publisher

AIP Publishing

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