“Zipper-Like” Periodic Magnetosonic Waves: Van Allen Probes, THEMIS, and Magnetospheric Multiscale Observations†

2017 
An interesting form of “zipper-like” magnetosonic waves consisting of two bands of interleaved periodic rising-tone spectra was newly observed by the Van Allen Probes, the THEMIS, and the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) missions. The two discrete bands are distinct in frequency and intensity, however, they maintain the same periodicity which varies in space and time, suggesting that they possibly originate from one single source intrinsically. In one event, the “zipper-like” magnetosonic waves exhibit the same periodicity as a constant frequency magnetosonic wave and an electrostatic emission, but the modulation comes from neither density fluctuations nor ULF waves. A statistical survey based on 3.5 years of multi-satellite observations shows that “zipper-like” magnetosonic waves mainly occur on the dawn-to-noon side, in a frequency range between 10 fcp and fLHR. The “zipper-like” magnetosonic waves may provide a new clue to nonlinear excitation or modulation process while its cause still remains to be fully understood.
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