Geophysical Research Letters (Feb 2024)

Long Lifetime Hiss Rays in the Disturbed Plasmasphere

  • Zhiyong Wu,
  • Zhenpeng Su,
  • Huinan Zheng,
  • Yuming Wang,
  • Yoshizumi Miyoshi,
  • Iku Shinohara,
  • Ayako Matsuoka,
  • Yoshiya Kasahara,
  • Fuminori Tsuchiya,
  • Atsushi Kumamoto,
  • Shoya Matsuda,
  • Yasumasa Kasaba,
  • Mariko Teramoto,
  • Tomoaki Hori

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL107825
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Plasmaspheric hiss waves are important to shape the Earth’s electron radiation belt. These waves are commonly envisioned to have a long lifetime which allows them to permeate the global plasmasphere from a spatially restricted source. However, this hypothesis has not been experimentally confirmed yet, because of the challenging observational requirements in terms of location and timing. With wave and particle measurements from five magnetospheric satellites and detailed modeling, we present the first report of long lifetime (∼42 s) hiss rays in the substorm‐disturbed plasmasphere. The low‐frequency hiss waves are found to originate from the middle piece of the plasmaspheric plume, bounce between two hemispheres, and eventually drift into the plasmaspheric core. These hiss rays can travel through ∼3 hr magnetic local time and ∼4 magnetic shell. Such a long‐time and large‐scale permeation of hiss rays could benefit from the ducting process by plasmaspheric field‐aligned density irregularities.

Keywords