Two-dimensional hybrid particle-in-cell simulations of magnetosonic
waves in the dipole magnetic field: On a constant L-shell
Abstract
Two-dimensional hybrid particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations are carried
out on a constant L-shell (or drift shell) surface of the dipole
magnetic field to investigate the generation process of near-equatorial
fast magnetosonic waves (a.k.a equatorial noise; MSWs hereafter) in the
inner magnetosphere. The simulation domain on a constant L-shell surface
adopted here allows wave propagation and growth in the azimuthal
direction (as well as along the field line) and is motivated by the
observations that MSWs propagate preferentially in the azimuthal
direction in the source region. Furthermore, the equatorial ring-like
proton distribution used to drive MSWs in the present study is
(realistically) weakly anisotropic. Consequently, the ring-like velocity
distribution projected along the field line by Liouville’s theorem
extends to rather high latitude, and linear instability analysis using
the local plasma conditions predicts substantial MSW growth up to +-
27deg latitude. In the simulations, however, the MSW intensity maximizes
near the equator and decreases quasi-exponentially with latitude.
Further analysis reveals that the stronger equatorward refraction at
higher latitude due to the larger gradient of the dipole magnetic field
strength prevents off-equatorial MSWs from growing continuously, whereas
MSWs of equatorial origin experience little refraction and can fully
grow. Furthermore, the simulated MSWs exhibit a rather complex wave
field structure varying with latitude, and the scattering of energetic
ring-like protons in response to MSW excitation occurs faster than the
bounce period of those protons so that they do not necessarily follow
Liouville’s theorem during MSW excitation.