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Akira Kadokura

Researcher at National Institute of Polar Research

Publications -  135
Citations -  1613

Akira Kadokura is an academic researcher from National Institute of Polar Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Substorm & Cosmic ray. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 124 publications receiving 1365 citations. Previous affiliations of Akira Kadokura include Graduate University for Advanced Studies.

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Ground-based instruments of the PWING project to investigate dynamics of the inner magnetosphere at subauroral latitudes as a part of the ERG-ground coordinated observation network

TL;DR: The PWING project as mentioned in this paper has been carried out since April 2016 to provide the global distribution and quantitative evaluation of the dynamical variation of these plasmas and waves in the inner magnetosphere.
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Magnetic conjugacy of northern and southern auroral beads

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used simultaneous ground-based, all-sky camera observations from a geomagnetically conjugate Iceland-Syowa Station pair to demonstrate that the auroral beads, whose wavelength is ∼30-50 km, evolve synchronously in the northern and southern hemispheres and have remarkable interhemispheric similarities.
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Two‐dimensional numerical modeling of the cosmic ray storm

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of a flare-associated interplanetary shock and the disturbed region behind it (characterized by enhancement in velocity and magnetic field, and decrease in mean free path) on the density and anisotropy of cosmic rays in the heliosphere is estimated.

Magnetic conjugacy of northern and southern auroral beads

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used simultaneous ground-based, all-sky camera observations from a geomagnetically conjugate Iceland-Syowa Station pair to demonstrate that the auroral beads, whose wavelength is ∼30-50 km, evolve synchronously in the northern and southern hemispheres and have remarkable interhemispheric similarities.