4:30 PM - 4:45 PM
[PEM10-21] PARM-HEP Observation of Microburst Precipitation over Pulsating Aurora
Keywords:microburst, pulsating aurora, sounding rocket
The mechanism of microbursts is similar to that of the pulsating aurora observed in the Earth’s polar region, and there is a possibility that the origin of microburst can be clarified by proving simultaneous occurrence of microburst and pulsating aurora. For that purpose, we have developed a high-energy electron detector (HEP) for the observation of sub-relativistic - relativistic energy electrons that make up the microburst, which is one of the core instruments of the PARM instrument package developed for the simultaneous observation of the pulsating aurora and microburst. The first model of this instrument was installed by the international student sounding rocket experiment RockSat-XN and launched on the dayside (MLT = 12.4) under quiet condition at 09:13:00 UT on January 13, 2019. Although simultaneous observation with pulsating aurora was impossible and the significant microbursts cannot be detected, we could not observe the pulsating aurora simultaneously or detect significant microbursts, we observed the energy spectrum of quasi-relativistic energy electrons likely to be caused by the wave-particle interactions between whistler-mode waves and sub-relativistic electrons in the quiet dayside magnetosphere [Namekawa et al., 2021]. An improved version of HEP is also installed by LAMP (Loss through Auroral Microburst Pulsation) sounding rocket experiment. An anti-coincidence counter was loaded in this model to eliminate the effects of penetrating particles such as galactic cosmic rays. In this presentation, we will show the outline of HEP and the observation results of RockSat-XN and LAMP experiments.