TY - JOUR
T1 - Electron Pitch-Angle Distribution in Earth's Magnetotail
T2 - Pancake, Cigar, Isotropy, Butterfly, and Rolling-Pin
AU - Liu, C. M.
AU - Fu, H. S.
AU - Liu, Y. Y.
AU - Wang, Z.
AU - Chen, G.
AU - Xu, Y.
AU - Chen, Z. Z.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2020. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2020/4/1
Y1 - 2020/4/1
N2 - Electron pitch-angle distributions, including isotropy, pancake, cigar, butterfly, and recently discovered rolling-pin distributions, are crucial to understanding electron dynamics in the magnetotail. However, occurrence rates of these distributions remain unclear. Here, for the first time, we reveal the occurrence rates of these distributions in the magnetotail by using Cluster data during 2001–2009, with special focus on the newly reported rolling-pin distribution. We find that percentages of these distributions are 44.7% (isotropy), 31.3% (pancake), 17.5% (cigar), 4.9% (rolling-pin), and 1.6% (butterfly), respectively. We find that in the XYGSM plane, occurrence rates of these PADs peak near: [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −5 RE] (isotropy), [XGSM ≈ −15 RE, YGSM ≈ −11 RE] (pancake), [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −5 RE] (cigar), [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −3 RE] (rolling-pin), and [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −4 RE] (butterfly), respectively; and along the r direction, where r is the distance to the center of the Earth in the XYGSM plane, their occurrence rates peak near: −18 RE < r < −12 RE (isotropy), −20 RE < r < −12 RE (pancake), −16 RE < r < −10 RE (cigar), r ≈ −13 RE (rolling-pin), and −14 RE < r < −10 RE (butterfly), respectively. Such rates indicate that the rolling-pin and cigar distributions have similar occurrence rates, supporting previous studies suggesting that rolling-pin distributions arise from cigar distributions. All distributions have maximum occurrences near the equator but at different subregions. We cannot find any statistical correlation between magnetic structures and the rolling-pin distributions, different from previous studies suggesting a close connection between them.
AB - Electron pitch-angle distributions, including isotropy, pancake, cigar, butterfly, and recently discovered rolling-pin distributions, are crucial to understanding electron dynamics in the magnetotail. However, occurrence rates of these distributions remain unclear. Here, for the first time, we reveal the occurrence rates of these distributions in the magnetotail by using Cluster data during 2001–2009, with special focus on the newly reported rolling-pin distribution. We find that percentages of these distributions are 44.7% (isotropy), 31.3% (pancake), 17.5% (cigar), 4.9% (rolling-pin), and 1.6% (butterfly), respectively. We find that in the XYGSM plane, occurrence rates of these PADs peak near: [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −5 RE] (isotropy), [XGSM ≈ −15 RE, YGSM ≈ −11 RE] (pancake), [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −5 RE] (cigar), [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −3 RE] (rolling-pin), and [XGSM ≈ −11 RE, YGSM ≈ −4 RE] (butterfly), respectively; and along the r direction, where r is the distance to the center of the Earth in the XYGSM plane, their occurrence rates peak near: −18 RE < r < −12 RE (isotropy), −20 RE < r < −12 RE (pancake), −16 RE < r < −10 RE (cigar), r ≈ −13 RE (rolling-pin), and −14 RE < r < −10 RE (butterfly), respectively. Such rates indicate that the rolling-pin and cigar distributions have similar occurrence rates, supporting previous studies suggesting that rolling-pin distributions arise from cigar distributions. All distributions have maximum occurrences near the equator but at different subregions. We cannot find any statistical correlation between magnetic structures and the rolling-pin distributions, different from previous studies suggesting a close connection between them.
KW - Electron acceleration
KW - Magnetotail
KW - Pitch angle distribution
KW - Rolling-pin distribution
KW - Suparthermal electrons
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85083987151
U2 - 10.1029/2020JA027777
DO - 10.1029/2020JA027777
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85083987151
SN - 2169-9380
VL - 125
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
IS - 4
M1 - e2020JA027777
ER -