Propagation of electron bursts in the low-latitude magnetosphere

Physics

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Scientific paper

The APEX project (Active Plasma Experiment) has been launched into a polar orbit in December 1991 and consists of two satellites (IK-25 and MAGION-3), with a distance from 200 km to 10 000 km between them. The paper deals with short intensive bursts of field-aligned electrons observed during the APEX mission on board the MAGION-3 satellite. These events are predominantly located at the middle geomagnetic latitudes in the day-side magnetosphere. The time-energy structure of these electron bursts is similar to the inverted-V one but the pitch-angle width is less than 10°. Electrons with an energy up to 700 keV are often observed during the events. We analyse the observed events, discuss the possible mechanisms of the particle spreading and the role of the activity of the main satellite as a possible source of these events.

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