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Author

Robert F. Pfaff

Other affiliations: University of Kiel
Bio: Robert F. Pfaff is an academic researcher from Goddard Space Flight Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ionosphere & Electric field. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 144 publications receiving 5439 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert F. Pfaff include University of Kiel.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report observations of fast solitary waves that are ubiquitous in downward current regions of the mid-altitude auroral zone and propose that these nonlinear structures play a key role in supporting parallel electric fields.
Abstract: We report observations of “fast solitary waves” that are ubiquitous in downward current regions of the mid-altitude auroral zone. The single-period structures have large amplitudes (up to 2.5 V/m), travel much faster than the ion acoustic speed, carry substantial potentials (up to ∼100 Volts), and are associated with strong modulations of energetic electron fluxes. The amplitude and speed of the structures distinguishes them from ion-acoustic solitary waves or weak double layers. The electromagnetic signature appears to be that of an positive charge (electron hole) traveling anti-earthward. We present evidence that the structures are in or near regions of magnetic-field-aligned electric fields and propose that these nonlinear structures play a key role in supporting parallel electric fields in the downward current region of the auroral zone.

531 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ICE (Instrument Champ Electrique) experiment on board DEMETER is to provide a nearly continuous survey of the electromagnetic and/or electrostatic waves that may arise from the coupling of seismic activity with the upper atmosphere and ionosphere as discussed by the authors.

316 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the acceleration of upgoing electron beams by quasi-static parallel electric fields was detected in the winter auroral zone, and the most energetic ion conics were found coincident with these beams, in agreement with the model for trapped conics.
Abstract: Observations of plasma particles and fields by the FAST satellite find evidence of acceleration of intense upgoing electron beams by quasi-static parallel electric fields. The beam characteristics include a broad energy spectrum with peak energies between 100 eV and 5 keV, perpendicular temperatures less than 1 eV, and fluxes greater than 109/cm²sec. Diverging electrostatic shocks associated with the beams have integrated potentials that match the beam energy. These beams are found in regions of downward Birkeland current and account for the total field-aligned current when they are present. The most energetic ion conics in the auroral zone are found coincident with these beams, in agreement with the model for “trapped” conics. The measured particle densities of the electron beams and associated ion conics are approximately equal and typically range from 1 to 10 cm−3, with no evidence for additional cold density. The beams are seen frequently at altitudes between 2000 and 4000 km in the winter auroral zone. Their probability of occurrence has a strong dependence on season and altitude and is similar to that for upgoing ion beams in the adjacent upward current regions. This similarity suggests that the density and scale height of ionospheric ions play an important role in the formation of both types of beams.

301 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate that parallel electric fields may be a fundamental particle acceleration mechanism in astrophysical plasmas by comparing the inferred parallel potentials of electrostatic shocks with particle energies.
Abstract: Electric field and energetic particle observations by the Fast Auroral Snapshot (FAST) satellite provide convincing evidence of particle acceleration by quasi-static, magnetic-field-aligned (parallel) electric fields in both the upward and downward current regions of the auroral zone. We demonstrate this by comparing the inferred parallel potentials of electrostatic shocks with particle energies. We also report nonlinear electric field structures which may play a role in supporting parallel electric fields. These structures include large-amplitude ion cyclotron waves in the upward current region, and intense, spiky electric fields in the downward current region. The observed structures had substantial parallel components and correlative electron flux modulations. Observations of parallel electric fields in two distinct plasmas suggest that parallel electric fields may be a fundamental particle acceleration mechanism in astrophysical plasmas.

282 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The FAST satellite mission as discussed by the authors investigates plasma processes occurring in the low altitude auroral acceleration region, where magnetic field-aligned currents couple global magnetospheric current systems to the high latitude ionosphere.
Abstract: The FAST satellite mission investigates plasma processes occurring in the low altitude auroral acceleration region, where magnetic field-aligned currents couple global magnetospheric current systems to the high latitude ionosphere. In the transition region between the hot tenuous magnetospheric plasma and the cold, dense ionosphere, these currents give rise to parallel electric fields, particle beams, plasma heating, and a host of wave-particle interactions. FAST instruments provide observations of plasma particles and fields in this region, with excellent temporal and spatial resolution combined with high quantitative accuracy. The spacecraft data system performs on-board evaluation of the measurements to select data “snapshots” that are stored for later transmission to the ground. New measurements from FAST show that upward and downward current regions in the auroral zone have complementary field and particle features defined by upward and downward directed parallel electric field structures and corresponding electron and ion beams. Direct measurements of wave particle interactions have led to several discoveries, including Debye-scale electric solitary waves associated with the acceleration of upgoing electron beams and ion heating, and the identification of electrons modulated by ion cyclotron waves as the source of flickering aurora. Detailed quantitative measurements of plasma density, plasma waves, and electron distributions associated with auroral kilometric radiation source regions yield a consistent explanation for AKR wave generation.

276 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The International Reference Ionosphere model (IRI-2016) as mentioned in this paper is the latest version of the IRI model and includes two new model options for the F2 peak height hmF2 and a better representation of topside ion densities at very low and high solar activities.
Abstract: The paper presents the latest version of the International Reference Ionosphere model (IRI-2016) describing the most important changes and improvements that were included with this version and discussing their impact on the IRI predictions of ionospheric parameters. IRI-2016 includes two new model options for the F2 peak height hmF2 and a better representation of topside ion densities at very low and high solar activities. In addition, a number of smaller changes were made concerning the use of solar indices and the speedup of the computer program. We also review the latest developments toward a Real-Time IRI. The goal is to progress from predicting climatology to describing the real-time weather conditions in the ionosphere.

735 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The scientific objectives targeted by the SPP/FIELDS instrument, the instrument design itself, and the instrument concept of operations and planned data products are described.
Abstract: NASA’s Solar Probe Plus (SPP) mission will make the first in situ measurements of the solar corona and the birthplace of the solar wind. The FIELDS instrument suite on SPP will make direct measurements of electric and magnetic fields, the properties of in situ plasma waves, electron density and temperature profiles, and interplanetary radio emissions, amongst other things. Here, we describe the scientific objectives targeted by the SPP/FIELDS instrument, the instrument design itself, and the instrument concept of operations and planned data products.

540 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report observations of fast solitary waves that are ubiquitous in downward current regions of the mid-altitude auroral zone and propose that these nonlinear structures play a key role in supporting parallel electric fields.
Abstract: We report observations of “fast solitary waves” that are ubiquitous in downward current regions of the mid-altitude auroral zone. The single-period structures have large amplitudes (up to 2.5 V/m), travel much faster than the ion acoustic speed, carry substantial potentials (up to ∼100 Volts), and are associated with strong modulations of energetic electron fluxes. The amplitude and speed of the structures distinguishes them from ion-acoustic solitary waves or weak double layers. The electromagnetic signature appears to be that of an positive charge (electron hole) traveling anti-earthward. We present evidence that the structures are in or near regions of magnetic-field-aligned electric fields and propose that these nonlinear structures play a key role in supporting parallel electric fields in the downward current region of the auroral zone.

531 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The axial double probe (ADP) instrument on the magnetospheric multiscale (MMS) spacecraft has been used to measure DC electric field with a precision of ∼ 1.1mV/m, a resolution of ∼ 25μV/μ, and a range of ∼±1 V/m in most of the plasma environments MMS will encounter.
Abstract: The Axial Double Probe (ADP) instrument measures the DC to ∼100 kHz electric field along the spin axis of the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) spacecraft (Burch et al., Space Sci. Rev., 2014, this issue), completing the vector electric field when combined with the spin plane double probes (SDP) (Torbert et al., Space Sci. Rev., 2014, this issue, Lindqvist et al., Space Sci. Rev., 2014, this issue). Two cylindrical sensors are separated by over 30 m tip-to-tip, the longest baseline on an axial DC electric field ever attempted in space. The ADP on each of the spacecraft consists of two identical, 12.67 m graphite coilable booms with second, smaller 2.25 m booms mounted on their ends. A significant effort was carried out to assure that the potential field of the MMS spacecraft acts equally on the two sensors and that photo- and secondary electron currents do not vary over the spacecraft spin. The ADP on MMS is expected to measure DC electric field with a precision of ∼1 mV/m, a resolution of ∼25 μV/m, and a range of ∼±1 V/m in most of the plasma environments MMS will encounter. The Digital Signal Processing (DSP) units on the MMS spacecraft are designed to perform analog conditioning, analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion, and digital processing on the ADP, SDP, and search coil magnetometer (SCM) (Le Contel et al., Space Sci. Rev., 2014, this issue) signals. The DSP units include digital filters, spectral processing, a high-speed burst memory, a solitary structure detector, and data compression. The DSP uses precision analog processing with, in most cases, >100 dB in dynamic range, better that −80 dB common mode rejection in electric field (E) signal processing, and better that −80 dB cross talk between the E and SCM (B) signals. The A/D conversion is at 16 bits with ∼1/4 LSB accuracy and ∼1 LSB noise. The digital signal processing is powerful and highly flexible allowing for maximum scientific return under a limited telemetry volume. The ADP and DSP are described in this article.

531 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Solar Wind Electrons Alphas and Protons (SWEAP) Investigation on Solar Probe Plus is a four sensor instrument suite that provides complete measurements of the electrons and ionized helium and hydrogen that constitute the bulk of solar wind and coronal plasma.
Abstract: The Solar Wind Electrons Alphas and Protons (SWEAP) Investigation on Solar Probe Plus is a four sensor instrument suite that provides complete measurements of the electrons and ionized helium and hydrogen that constitute the bulk of solar wind and coronal plasma. SWEAP consists of the Solar Probe Cup (SPC) and the Solar Probe Analyzers (SPAN). SPC is a Faraday Cup that looks directly at the Sun and measures ion and electron fluxes and flow angles as a function of energy. SPAN consists of an ion and electron electrostatic analyzer (ESA) on the ram side of SPP (SPAN-A) and an electron ESA on the anti-ram side (SPAN-B). The SPAN-A ion ESA has a time of flight section that enables it to sort particles by their mass/charge ratio, permitting differentiation of ion species. SPAN-A and -B are rotated relative to one another so their broad fields of view combine like the seams on a baseball to view the entire sky except for the region obscured by the heat shield and covered by SPC. Observations by SPC and SPAN produce the combined field of view and measurement capabilities required to fulfill the science objectives of SWEAP and Solar Probe Plus. SWEAP measurements, in concert with magnetic and electric fields, energetic particles, and white light contextual imaging will enable discovery and understanding of solar wind acceleration and formation, coronal and solar wind heating, and particle acceleration in the inner heliosphere of the solar system. SPC and SPAN are managed by the SWEAP Electronics Module (SWEM), which distributes power, formats onboard data products, and serves as a single electrical interface to the spacecraft. SWEAP data products include ion and electron velocity distribution functions with high energy and angular resolution. Full resolution data are stored within the SWEM, enabling high resolution observations of structures such as shocks, reconnection events, and other transient structures to be selected for download after the fact. This paper describes the implementation of the SWEAP Investigation, the driving requirements for the suite, expected performance of the instruments, and planned data products, as of mission preliminary design review.

483 citations