Publication | Closed Access
First Measurements of Electrons and Waves inside an Electrostatic Solitary Wave
55
Citations
68
References
2020
Year
EngineeringElectrostatic Solitary WaveMagnetotail Reconnection JetPlasma PhysicsElectron DiffractionSpace Plasma PhysicSpacecraft FrameElectron PhysicWave TheorySpace Plasma PhysicsCosmic PlasmaPlasma SimulationPlasma TheoryFirst MeasurementsSpace PhysicPhysicsFundamental Plasma PhysicAtomic PhysicsSpace WeatherApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsWave MechanicsMagnetospheric Physics
Electrostatic solitary wave (ESW)-a Debye-scale structure in space plasmas-was believed to accelerate electrons. However, such a belief is still unverified in spacecraft observations, because the ESW usually moves fast in spacecraft frame and its interior has never been directly explored. Here, we report the first measurements of an ESW's interior, by the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission located in a magnetotail reconnection jet. We find that this ESW has a parallel scale of 5λ_{De} (Debye length), a superslow speed (99 km/s) in spacecraft frame, a longtime duration (250 ms), and a potential drop eφ_{0}/kT_{e}∼5%. Inside the ESW, surprisingly, there is no electron acceleration, no clear change of electron distribution functions, but there exist strong electrostatic electron cyclotron waves. Our observations challenge the conventional belief that ESWs are efficient at particle acceleration.
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