Earth, Planets and Space (May 2018)

Data processing in Software-type Wave–Particle Interaction Analyzer onboard the Arase satellite

  • Mitsuru Hikishima,
  • Hirotsugu Kojima,
  • Yuto Katoh,
  • Yoshiya Kasahara,
  • Satoshi Kasahara,
  • Takefumi Mitani,
  • Nana Higashio,
  • Ayako Matsuoka,
  • Yoshizumi Miyoshi,
  • Kazushi Asamura,
  • Takeshi Takashima,
  • Shoichiro Yokota,
  • Masahiro Kitahara,
  • Shoya Matsuda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-018-0856-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 70, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The software-type wave–particle interaction analyzer (S-WPIA) is an instrument package onboard the Arase satellite, which studies the magnetosphere. The S-WPIA represents a new method for directly observing wave–particle interactions onboard a spacecraft in a space plasma environment. The main objective of the S-WPIA is to quantitatively detect wave–particle interactions associated with whistler-mode chorus emissions and electrons over a wide energy range (from several keV to several MeV). The quantity of energy exchanges between waves and particles can be represented as the inner product of the wave electric-field vector and the particle velocity vector. The S-WPIA requires accurate measurement of the phase difference between wave and particle gyration. The leading edge of the S-WPIA system allows us to collect comprehensive information, including the detection time, energy, and incoming direction of individual particles and instantaneous-wave electric and magnetic fields, at a high sampling rate. All the collected particle and waveform data are stored in the onboard large-volume data storage. The S-WPIA executes calculations asynchronously using the collected electric and magnetic wave data, data acquired from multiple particle instruments, and ambient magnetic-field data. The S-WPIA has the role of handling large amounts of raw data that are dedicated to calculations of the S-WPIA. Then, the results are transferred to the ground station. This paper describes the design of the S-WPIA and its calculations in detail, as implemented onboard Arase.

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