Adiabatic acceleration of suprathermal electrons associated with dipolarization fronts

Date

2012-12-19

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Pan, Q., Ashour-Abdalla, M., El-Alaoui, M., Walker, R. J., and Goldstein, M. L. (2012), Adiabatic acceleration of suprathermal electrons associated with dipolarization fronts, J. Geophys. Res., 117, A12224, doi:10.1029/2012JA018156.

Rights

This work was written as part of one of the author's official duties as an Employee of the United States Government and is therefore a work of the United States Government. In accordance with 17 U.S.C. 105, no copyright protection is available for such works under U.S. Law.
Public Domain Mark 1.0

Subjects

Abstract

Recent observations in the inner magnetotail have shown rapid and significant flux increases (usually an order of magnitude of increase within seconds) of suprathermal electrons (tens of keV to hundreds of keV) associated with earthward moving dipolarization fronts. To explain where and how these suprathermal electrons are produced during substorm intervals, two types of acceleration models have been suggested by previous studies: acceleration that localizes near the reconnection site and acceleration that occurs during earthward transport. We perform an analytical analysis of adiabatic acceleration to show that the slope of source differential fluxes is critical for understanding adiabatic flux enhancements during earthward transport. Observationally, two earthward propagating dipolarization fronts accompanied by energetic electron flux enhancements observed by the THEMIS spacecraft have been analyzed; in each event the properties of dipolarization fronts in the inner magnetosphere (XGₛₘ ≈ −10RE) were well correlated with those further down the tail (XGₛₘ ≈ −15RE or XGₛₘ ≈ −20RE). Coupled with theoretical analysis, this enables us to estimate the relative acceleration that occurred as the electrons propagated earthward between the two spacecraft. During the two events studied, the differential fluxes of supra thermal electrons had steep energy spectra with power law indices of −4 to −6.These spectra were much steeper than those at lower energy, as well as those of the supra thermal electrons observed before the fronts arrived. A compression factor of 1.5 as the electrons propagated earthward induced a flux increase of suprathermal electrons by a factor of 7 to 17. Provided these steep spectra, we demonstrate that adiabatic acceleration from the betatron and Fermi mechanisms simultaneously operating can account for these flux increases. Since both analytical analysis and data from the two events show that adiabatic acceleration during earthward transport does not significantly change the power law indices, the steep spectra were likely to be traced back to their source region, presumably near the reconnection site.