SLIMプロジェクトチーム

浅村 和史

アサムラ カズシ  (Kazushi Asamura)

基本情報

所属
国立研究開発法人宇宙航空研究開発機構 宇宙科学研究所 太陽系科学研究系 准教授
学位
理学修士
博士(理学)

J-GLOBAL ID
200901058783588460
researchmap会員ID
1000292024

学歴

 2

論文

 224
  • R. Takahara, I. Shinohara, S. Kasahara, K. Asamura, S. Yokota, K. Keika, Y. Kazama, S.‐Y. Wang, S. W. Y. Tam, T.‐F. Chang, B.‐J. Wang, C.‐W. Jun, T. Hori, A. Matsuoka, M. Teramoto, K. Yamamoto, Y. Kasahara, S. Matsuda, A. Kumamoto, A. Shinbori, F. Tsuchiya, Y. Miyoshi
    Geophysical Research Letters 52(3) 2025年2月10日  査読有り
    Abstract We report a statistical result of electrons inside the loss cone with energies of 67 eV–88 keV using electron measurements obtained in situ by the Arase satellite in the inner magnetosphere around the magnetic equator for 60 months. Loss cone electrons are found with a high occurrence probability from the nightside to the dawnside at approximately L = 6. For 641 eV–88 keV electrons, the high‐occurrence region shifts toward later magnetic local times (MLTs) with increasing loss cone electron energy. The spatial distribution of the occurrence probability around MLT = 22–3 at L = 5–6 is consistent with the calculated average resonance energy distribution of whistler mode chorus waves near the magnetic equator. These results suggest that pitch angle scattering driven by chorus waves plays the main role in electron precipitation in this region.
  • Rei Sugimura, Kazuo Shiokawa, Yuichi Otsuka, Shin‐ichiro Oyama, Arto Oksanen, Martin Connors, Akira Kadokura, Igor Poddelsky, Nozomu Nishitani, Simon G. Shepherd, J. Michael Ruohoniemi, Charles Smith, Harlan Spence, Geoff Reeves, Herbert O. Funsten, Yoshizumi Miyoshi, Iku Shinohara, Yoshiya Kasahara, Fuminori Tsuchiya, Atsushi Kumamoto, Atsuki Shinbori, Kazushi Asamura, Shoichiro Yokota, Yoichi Kazama, C.‐W. Jun, Shiang‐Yu Wang, Sunny W. Y. Tam, Tzu‐Fang Chang, Bo‐Jhou Wang, Satoshi Kasahara, Kunihiro Keika, Tomoaki Hori, Ayako Matsuoka
    Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 130(2) 2025年2月6日  査読有り
    Abstract Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancement (STEVE) is a latitudinally narrow, purple‐band emission observed at subauroral latitudes. Stable Auroral Red (SAR) arcs characterized by major red emission, and red/green arcs with both red and green emissions also occur at subauroral latitudes. Characteristics of magnetospheric source plasma and electromagnetic fields of these three types of arcs have not been fully understood because of the limited conjugate observations between magnetosphere and the ground. In this study, we report 11 conjugate observations (2 STEVEs, 7 SAR arcs, and 2 red/green arcs), using all‐sky images obtained at seven ground stations over more than four years from January 2017 to April 2021 and magnetospheric satellites (Arase and Van Allen Probes). We found that, in the inner magnetosphere, the source region of STEVEs and red/green arcs were located outside the plasmasphere, and that of the SAR arc was in the region of spatial overlap between the plasmasphere and ring current region. Electromagnetic waves at frequencies below 1 Hz were observed for STEVEs and red/green arcs. SuperDARN radar data showed a strong westward plasma flow in the ionosphere, especially during STEVE events, whereas the plasma flows associated with SAR arcs and red/green arcs were generally weaker and variable. The STEVE and SAR arc can appear simultaneously at slightly different latitudes and STEVEs and red/green arcs can transform into SAR arcs. These first comprehensive ground‐satellite measurements of three types of subauroral‐latitude auroras increase our understanding on similarlity, differences, and coupling of these auroras in the ionosphere and the magnetosphere.
  • Oya Kawashima, Satoshi Kasahara, Naho Yanase, Yoshihisa Okitsu, Yoshifumi Saito, Masafumi Hirahara, Masahiro Yoneda, Kazushi Asamura, Shoichiro Yokota, Kota Nagasao, Naoki Mori
    Vacuum 114132-114132 2025年2月  査読有り
  • K. Hosokawa, Y. Miyoshi, M. Mcharg, V. Ledvina, D. Hampton, M. Lessard, M. Shumko, K. Asamura, T. Sakanoi, T. Mitani, T. Namekawa, M. Nosé, Y. Ogawa, A. Jaynes, A. Halford
    Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 129(11) 2024年11月12日  査読有り
    Abstract We estimated the altitude of aurora by combining data from all‐sky cameras at multiple places which were obtained during the LAMP sounding rocket experiment in Alaska on 5 March 2022. During the launch window of the rocket, three high‐speed all‐sky cameras were operative at three stations immediately below the trajectory of the rocket: Poker Flat, Venetie and Fort Yukon. The all‐sky cameras captured all‐sky images with a temporal resolution of 100 Hz (80 Hz for the Fort Yukon case). The method of altitude determination is based on analyses of time‐series of the optical intensity obtained from the all‐sky cameras in Venetie and Poker Flat covering the downrange area of the rocket trajectory. The estimated altitude of pulsating aurora during the rocket experiment was found to be consistent with that derived from the in‐situ observation of precipitating electrons with a model of optical emission, which confirms the feasibility of deriving the emission altitude through correlation analyses using time‐series. The estimated altitude of aurora decreased after the expansion onset of the substorm and stayed slightly below 100 km during the interval of pulsating aurora in the recovery phase. In particular, prompt and brief lowering of the auroral emission, well down to around 90 km, was detected during a transition of auroral form from discrete to diffuse which occurred ∼10 min after the onset. This result implies an existence of a process causing harder electron precipitation operative soon after the start of the expansion phase of auroral substorm.
  • Masafumi Hirahara, Yusuke Ebihara, Naritoshi Kitamura, Takeshi Sakanoi, Kazushi Asamura, Taku Takada, Hirobumi Saito
    Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 129(10) 2024年10月5日  査読有り
    Abstract We present an event based on Reimei satellite observations in the low‐altitude midnight auroral region, showing that intense and clear energy‐dispersed electron precipitations, repetitively generated by field‐aligned accelerations due to dispersive Alfvén waves, were modulating inverted‐V electrons. These Alfvénic electrons had peak energies equal to or slightly larger than those of the inverted‐Vs and were associated with the filamentary auroral forms rapidly streaming at the poleward edge of a broad discrete arc. This arc was caused by the inverted‐V accompanied by ion depletions produced by quasi‐electrostatic parallel potential drop. Assuming instantaneous electron accelerations over a wide energy range in a single location and a simple time‐of‐flight effect for the energy‐time dispersions, the Alfvénic source distances were estimated 1,500 ± 500 km above the satellite altitude of ∼676 km, a lower bound since the interaction locations are realistically distributed in altitudinally extended regions. The electron characteristics in detailed energy‐pitch angle distributions obtained at high time resolution can be categorized into: (a) original inverted‐V fluxes energized by quasi‐electrostatic upward electric field, (b) accelerated and decelerated/reduced inverted‐V fluxes, (c) field‐aligned energy‐dispersed precipitations accelerated by dispersive Alfvén waves, and (d) upwelling secondary components effectively produced by the field‐aligned precipitations particularly at energies of a few tens of eV. This event is useful to reveal the interactions between the inverted‐V and Alfvénic electrons and their related ionospheric effects in the magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling processes. The detailed energy‐pitch angle distributions presented here provide constraints for models of these interactions and processes.

MISC

 133

共同研究・競争的資金等の研究課題

 21