Whistler waves associated with electron beams in magnetopause
reconnection diffusion regions
Abstract
Whistler waves are often observed in magnetopause reconnection
associated with electron beams. We analyze seven MMS crossings
surrounding the electron diffusion region (EDR) to study the role of
electron beams in whistler excitation. Waves have two major types: (1)
Narrow-band waves with high ellipticities and (2) broad-band waves that
are more electrostatic with significant variations in ellipticities and
wave normal angles. While both types of waves are associated with
electron beams, the key difference is the anisotropy of the background
population, with perpendicular and parallel anisotropies, respectively.
The linear instability analysis suggests that the first type of wave is
mainly due to the background anisotropy, with the beam contributing
additional cyclotron resonance to enhance the wave growth. The second
type of distribution excites broadband waves via Landau resonance, and
as seen in one event, the beam anisotropy induces an additional
cyclotron mode. The results are supported by particle-in-cell
simulations. We infer that the first type occurs downstream of the
central EDR, where background electrons experience Betatron acceleration
to form the perpendicular anisotropy; the second type occurs in the
central EDR of guide field reconnection. A parametric study is conducted
with linear instability analysis. A beam anisotropy alone of above
~3 likely excites the cyclotron mode waves. Large beam
drifts cause Doppler shifts and may lead to left-hand polarizations in
the ion frame. Future studies are needed to determine whether the
observation covers a broader parameter regime and to understand the
competition between whistler and other instabilities.