Curriculum Vitaes

Takeshi Takashima

  (高島 健)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Professer, Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency
Degree
Ph. D(Mar, 1998, Waseda University)

J-GLOBAL ID
200901062235719944
researchmap Member ID
1000320874

Education

 1

Papers

 157
  • Weiqin Sun, Xiao‐Jia Zhang, Anton V. Artemyev, Didier Mourenas, Steven K. Morley, Vassilis Angelopoulos, S. Kasahara, Y. Miyoshi, A. Matsuoka, T. Mitani, S. Yokota, T. Hori, K. Keika, T. Takashima, M. Teramoto, I. Shinohara, K. Yamamoto
    Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 129(11), Oct 28, 2024  
    Abstract Near‐equatorial measurements of energetic electron fluxes, in combination with numerical simulation, are widely used for monitoring of the radiation belt dynamics. However, the long orbital periods of near‐equatorial spacecraft constrain the cadence of observations to once per several hours or greater, that is, much longer than the mesoscale injections and rapid local acceleration and losses of energetic electrons of interest. An alternative approach for radiation belt monitoring is to use measurements of low‐altitude spacecraft, which cover, once per hour or faster, the latitudinal range of the entire radiation belt within a few minutes. Such an approach requires, however, a procedure for mapping the flux from low equatorial pitch angles (near the loss cone) as measured at low altitude, to high equatorial pitch angles (far from the loss cone), as necessitated by equatorial flux models. Here we do this using the high energy resolution ELFIN measurements of energetic electrons. Combining those with GPS measurements we develop a model for the electron anisotropy coefficient, , that describes electron flux dependence on equatorial pitch‐angle, , . We then validate this model by comparing its equatorial predictions from ELFIN with in‐situ near‐equatorial measurements from Arase (ERG) in the outer radiation belt.
  • Vladimir Borisovich Belakhovsky, Vyacheslav A. Pilipenko, Elizaveta E. Antonova, Yoshizumi Miyoshi, Yoshiya Kasahara, Satoshi Kasahara, Nana Higashio, Iku Shinohara, Tomoaki Hori, Shoya Matsuda, Shoichiro Yokota, Takeshi Takashima, Mitani Takefumi, Kunihiro Keika, Satoko Nakamura
    Earth, Planets and Space, 75(1), Dec 21, 2023  
    Abstract Variations of relativistic electron fluxes (E ≥ 1 MeV) and wave activity in the Earth magnetosphere are studied to determine the contribution of different acceleration mechanisms of the outer radiation belt electrons: ULF mechanism, VLF mechanism, and adiabatic acceleration. The electron fluxes were measured by Arase satellite and geostationary GOES satellites. The ULF power index is used to characterize the magnetospheric wave activity in the Pc5 range. To characterize the VLF wave activity in the magnetosphere, we use data from PWE instrument of Arase satellite. We consider some of the most powerful magnetic storms during the Arase era: May 27–29, 2017; September 7–10, 2017; and August 25–28, 2018. Also, non-storm intervals with a high solar wind speed before and after these storms for comparison are analyzed. Magnitudes of relativistic electron fluxes during these magnetic storms are found to be greater than that during non-storm intervals with high solar wind streams. During magnetic storms, the flux intensity maximum shifts to lower L-shells compared to intervals without magnetic storms. For the considered events, the substorm activity, as characterized by AE index, is found to be a necessary condition for the increase of relativistic electron fluxes, whereas a high solar wind speed alone is not sufficient for the relativistic electron growth. The enhancement of relativistic electron fluxes by 1.5–2 orders of magnitude is observed 1–3 days after the growth of the ULF index and VLF emission power. The growth of VLF and ULF wave powers coincides with the growth of substorm activity and occurs approximately at the same time. Both mechanisms operate at the first phase of electron acceleration. At the second phase of electron acceleration, the mechanism associated with the injection of electrons into the region of the magnetic field weakened by the ring current and their subsequent betatron acceleration during the magnetic field restoration can work effectively. Graphical Abstract
  • Hiroyuki TOYOTA, Takeshi TAKASHIMA, Hiroshi IMAMURA, Kazutaka NISHIYAMA, Takayuki YAMAMOTO, Takeshi MIYABARA, Masayuki OHTA, Yoshitaka MOCHIHARA, Naoya OZAKI, Hiroyuki NAGAMATSU, Takakazu OKAHASHI, Junko TAKAHASHI, Toshiaki OKUDAIRA, Takayuki HIRAI, Masanori KOBAYASHI, Ko ISHIBASHI, Peng HONG, Osamu OKUDAIRA, Tomoko ARAI
    Journal of Evolving Space Activities, 1, Dec, 2023  Peer-reviewed
  • Yoshizumi Miyoshi, Yuto Katoh, Shinji Saito, Takefumi Mitani, Takeshi Takashima
    Solar-Terrestrial Environmental Prediction, 115-137, Feb 1, 2023  
  • Hiroki Hihara, Shinpei Kondo, Mitsuhisa Yamaji, Kuniyuki Omagari, Tadateru Takahashi, Naoki Yoshizawa, Kazuyo Mizushima, Takeshi Takashima
    Infrared Remote Sensing and Instrumentation XXX, Sep 30, 2022  

Misc.

 175

Research Projects

 25