4:25 PM - 4:40 PM
[PEM13-12] A drift kinetic simulation of internally driven ULF waves based on multi-point spacecraft observations in the ionosphere and the magnetosphere
Keywords:ULF wave, ring current, simulation, drift bounce resonance
In this study, we focus on the scenario of the excitation of second harmonic poloidal waves observed by Van Allen Probes in Earth’s inner magnetosphere on 29 October 2013. We used the data obtained from LANL and Iridium satellite measurements of the ring current ions at the geosynchronous orbit and the field-aligned current in the ionosphere to set realistic simulation inputs. Using the coupled model of Amano et al. (2011) and Nakamizo et al. (2012), we conducted a drift kinetic simulation of the ring current and electromagnetic field evolution based on the observational data set. Since higher energy ions drift westward, the velocity distribution of ion phase space density measured by the LANL satellite was not uniform for the magnetic local time (MLT). We set the kappa parameter of the ions at the outer boundary as a function of MLT. There was a moderate substorm ~3 hours before the poloidal wave detection. R1FAC density increased to ~1.7 uA/m2 during the substorm expansion phase and then gradually decreased to <0.3 uA/m2, according to Iridium satellite observations. We obtained the temporal function of R1FAC by the gaussian fitting of the data. From the inhomogeneous and temporal inputs, we found ULF oscillations near the location and timing of the Van Allen Probes observation in our simulation result. However, the waves were fundamental compressional modes. In this presentation, we will discuss the agreement and disagreement of the simulation results to reveal the importance of temporal and spatial variations of the ionospheric and magnetospheric conditions, which were simplified in the previous simulation studies.