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Observations of rapidly growing whistler waves in front of space plasma shock

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arxiv 2111.14832 v1 pith:LUC45LSU submitted 2021-11-29 physics.space-ph astro-ph.EPphysics.plasm-ph

Observations of rapidly growing whistler waves in front of space plasma shock

classification physics.space-ph astro-ph.EPphysics.plasm-ph
keywords fieldswavewaveswhistlerelectromagneticdistributionselectronsenergy
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Whistler mode wave is a fundamental perturbation of electromagnetic fields and plasmas in various environments including planetary space, laboratory and astrophysics. The origin and evolution of the waves are a long-standing question due to the limited instrumental capability in resolving highly variable plasma and electromagnetic fields. Here, we analyse data with the high time resolution from the multi-scale magnetospheric spacecraft in the weak magnetic environment (i.e., foreshock) enabling a relatively long gyro-period of whistler mode wave. Moreover, we develop a novel approach to separate the three-dimensional fluctuating electron velocity distributions from their background, and have successfully captured the coherent resonance between electrons and electromagnetic fields at high frequency, providing the resultant growth rate of unstable whistler waves. Regarding the energy origin for the waves, the ion distributions are found to also play crucial roles in determining the eigenmode disturbances of fields and electrons. The quantification of wave growth rate can significantly advance the understandings of the wave evolution and the energy conversion with particles.

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