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Dive into the research topics where Andrew N. Fazakerley is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew N. Fazakerley.


Space Science Reviews | 1997

PEACE: A PLASMA ELECTRON AND CURRENT EXPERIMENT

A. D. Johnstone; C. Alsop; S. Burge; Paul J. Carter; A. J. Coates; A. J. Coker; Andrew N. Fazakerley; M. Grande; R. A. Gowen; C. Gurgiolo; B.K. Hancock; B. T. Narheim; A. Preece; P. H. Sheather; J. D. Winningham; R. D. Woodliffe

An electron analyser to measure the three-dimensional velocity distribution of electrons in the energy range from 0.59 eV to 26.4 keV on the four spacecraft of the Cluster mission is described. The instrument consists of two sensors with hemispherical electrostatic energy analysers with a position-sensitive microchannel plate detectors placed to view radially on opposite sides of the spacecraft. The intrinsic energy resolutions of the two sensors are 12.7% and 16.5% full width at half maximum. Their angular resolutions are 2.8° and 5.3° respectively in an azimuthal direction and 15° in a polar direction. The two sensors will normally measure in different overlapping energy ranges and will scan the distribution in half a spacecraft rotation or 2 s in the overlapped range. While this is the fastest time resolution for complete distributions, partial distributions can be recorded in as little as 62.5 ms and angular distributions at a fixed energy in 7.8 ms. The dynamic range of the instrument is sufficient to provide accurate measurements of the main known populations from the tail lobe to the plasmasheet and the solar wind. While the basic structure of the instrument is conventional, special attention has been paid in the design to improving the precision of the instrument so that a relative accuracy of the order of 1% could be attained in flight in order to measure the gradients between the four spacecraft accurately; to decreasing the minimum energy covered by this technique from 10 eV down to 1 eV; and to providing good three dimensional distributions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2005

Cluster observations of electron holes in association with magnetotail reconnection and comparison to simulations

C. A. Cattell; J. Dombeck; J. R. Wygant; J. F. Drake; M. Swisdak; Melvyn L. Goldstein; W. R. Keith; Andrew N. Fazakerley; M. André; Elizabeth A. Lucek; A. Balogh

Cluster observations of electron holes in association with magnetotail reconnection and comparison to simulations


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Electron density estimations derived from spacecraft potential measurements on Cluster in tenuous plasma regions

A. Pedersen; B. Lybekk; Mats André; Anders Eriksson; Arnaud Masson; F. S. Mozer; Per-Arne Lindqvist; P. M. E. Décréau; Iannis Dandouras; J.-A. Sauvaud; Andrew N. Fazakerley; M. G. G. T. Taylor; G. Paschmann; K. R. Svenes; K. Torkar; E. C. Whipple

Spacecraft potential measurements by the EFW electric field experiment on the Cluster satellites can be used to obtain plasma density estimates in regions barely accessible to other type of plasma experiments. Direct calibrations of the plasma density as a function of the measured potential difference between the spacecraft and the probes can be carried out in the solar wind, the magnetosheath, and the plasmashere by the use of CIS ion density and WHISPER electron density measurements. The spacecraft photoelectron characteristic (photoelectrons escaping to the plasma in current balance with collected ambient electrons) can be calculated from knowledge of the electron current to the spacecraft based on plasma density and electron temperature data from the above mentioned experiments and can be extended to more positive spacecraft potentials by CIS ion and the PEACE electron experiments in the plasma sheet. This characteristic enables determination of the electron density as a function of spacecraft potential over the polar caps and in the lobes of the magnetosphere, regions where other experiments on Cluster have intrinsic limitations. Data from 2001 to 2006 reveal that the photoelectron characteristics of the Cluster spacecraft as well as the electric field probes vary with the solar cycle and solar activity. The consequences for plasma density measurements are addressed. Typical examples are presented to demonstrate the use of this technique in a polar cap/lobe plasma. Citation: Pedersen, A., et al. (2008), Electron density estimations derived from spacecraft potential measurements on Cluster in tenuous plasma regions,


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

A new form of Saturn's magnetopause using a dynamic pressure balance model, based on in situ, multi-instrument Cassini measurements

Shubhada Kanani; C. S. Arridge; G. H. Jones; Andrew N. Fazakerley; H. J. McAndrews; N. Sergis; S. M. Krimigis; M. K. Dougherty; A. J. Coates; D. T. Young; Kenneth Calvin Hansen; N. Krupp

The shape and location of a planetary magnetopause can be determined by balancing the solar wind dynamic pressure with the magnetic and thermal pressures found inside the boundary. Previous studies have found the kronian magnetosphere to show rigidity (like that of Earth) as well as compressibility (like that of Jupiter) in terms of its dynamics. In this paper we expand on previous work and present a new model of Saturns magnetopause. Using a Newtonian form of the pressure balance equation, we estimate the solar wind dynamic pressure at each magnetopause crossing by the Cassini spacecraft between Saturn Orbit Insertion in June 2004 and January 2006. We build on previous findings by including an improved estimate for the solar wind thermal pressure and include low-energy particle pressures from the Cassini plasma spectrometers electron spectrometer and high-energy particle pressures from the Cassini magnetospheric imaging instrument. Our improved model has a size-pressure dependence described by a power law D-P(-1/5.0 +/- 0.8). This exponent is consistent with that derived from numerical magnetohydrodynamic simulations.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Dynamics of thin current sheets associated with magnetotail reconnection

R. Nakamura; W. Baumjohann; Y. Asano; A. Runov; A. Balogh; C. J. Owen; Andrew N. Fazakerley; M. Fujimoto; B. Klecker; H. Rème

[1] We have examined the detailed structure of thin current sheets and their evolution during a substorm interval on 24 August 2003, when Cluster experienced several rapid current sheet crossings within a couple of ion gyrotimes. These crossings took place during an interval of high-speed ion flows with BZ reversals and signatures of accelerated electrons, suggesting crossing of the reconnection region. On the basis of four-point observations with a tetrahedron scale of � 200 km, we could quantify for the first time the thickness of the current sheet, which was comparable to or less than one ion inertia length, and resolve some internal structures such as multiple peaks within these thin current sheets. Different patterns in jX and in electron anisotropy were identified during the current sheet crossings: two crossings during tailward flow interval exhibited a quadrupole-type Hall current in the ion diffusion region without a guide field, while one crossing during earthward flow showed a current system as predicted in the ion diffusion region under the presence of a guide field. Multiple flux rope type signatures or transient skewed structures are observed in the thin current sheets, particularly in regions where signatures of electron acceleration are observed. These observations suggest that threedimensional localized/transient structures could play an essential role in the dynamics of the thin current sheets, while a gross X-line picture can be established only in an average sense.


Nature | 2001

Temporal evolution of the electric field accelerating electrons away from the auroral ionosphere

Göran Marklund; Nickolay Ivchenko; Tomas Karlsson; Andrew N. Fazakerley; M. W. Dunlop; Per-Arne Lindqvist; S. Buchert; C. J. Owen; M. Taylor; A. Vaivalds; Paul J. Carter; M. Andre; A. Balogh

The bright night-time aurorae that are visible to the unaided eye are caused by electrons accelerated towards Earth by an upward-pointing electric field. On adjacent geomagnetic field lines the reverse process occurs: a downward-pointing electric field accelerates electrons away from Earth. Such magnetic-field-aligned electric fields in the collisionless plasma above the auroral ionosphere have been predicted, but how they could be maintained is still a matter for debate. The spatial and temporal behaviour of the electric fields—a knowledge of which is crucial to an understanding of their nature—cannot be resolved uniquely by single satellite measurements. Here we report on the first observations by a formation of identically instrumented satellites crossing a beam of upward-accelerated electrons. The structure of the electric potential accelerating the beam grew in magnitude and width for about 200 s, accompanied by a widening of the downward-current sheet, with the total current remaining constant. The 200-s timescale suggests that the evacuation of the electrons from the ionosphere contributes to the formation of the downward-pointing magnetic-field-aligned electric fields. This evolution implies a growing load in the downward leg of the current circuit, which may affect the visible discrete aurorae.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2000

Conditions for the formation of hot flow anomalies at Earth's bow shock

S. J. Schwartz; Götz Paschmann; N. Sckopke; T. M. Bauer; M. W. Dunlop; Andrew N. Fazakerley; M. F. Thomsen

Hot flow anomalies (HFAs) result from the interaction of an interplanetary current sheet with Earths bow shock and were discovered over a decade and a half ago. The deflected flow and hot interior of an HFA are consequences of ions reflected at the bow shock being channeled along the current sheet. Previous studies have shown that this requires a solar wind motional electric field pointing toward the current sheet on at least one side and that the current sheet must be a tangential discontinuity. Recent reports of a rapid displacement of the magnetopause by 5 Re as the result of an HFA have led us to explore the interplanetary conditions surrounding all reported HFAs. The kinetic aspects of HFA formation suggest that current sheets should pass relatively slowly along the bow shock; that is, their normals should have large cone angles. This hypothesis is confirmed. Individual multispacecraft case studies confirm that the underlying current sheets are tangential discontinuities, but most HFAs have relatively small jumps in field magnitude from before to after and thus would fail traditional identification tests as definite tangential discontinuities. The combination of our results suggests that HFAs should occur at a rate of several per day, and thus they may play a significant role in the solar-terrestrial dynamics.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Electron flat-top distributions around the magnetic reconnection region

Y. Asano; R. Nakamura; I. Shinohara; M. Fujimoto; T. Takada; W. Baumjohann; C. J. Owen; Andrew N. Fazakerley; A. Runov; T. Nagai; Elizabeth A. Lucek; H. Rème

[1] Cluster multisatellite observations provide snapshots of electron distributions around the magnetic neutral line. An isotropic flat-top-type electron distribution in phase space is frequently observed around the X line, together with large ion velocities and a Hall quadrupole-like magnetic field inside the hot and tenuous plasma sheet in the magnetotail. The flat-top distributions are also associated with a finite magnetic field in the direction normal to the neutral sheet, and the cross-tail current density is sometimes very small. These results indicate that the flat-top-type distribution is mainly located near the outer boundary of the ion diffusion region in the plasma sheet outflow region, before reaching the pileup region with large normal component of the magnetic field. Simultaneously with the flat-top distributions, strong field-aligned electron beams mainly toward the X line are occasionally observed. This type of beam is mainly observed in the off-equatorial plasma sheet and also appears well inside the plasma sheet. Typical energies of the beam are 4–10 keV, which is comparable to the upper edge of flat-top energy. These highly accelerated electron distributions have a steep decrease in phase space density at the high-energy end, and it is found that they are not correlated with the increase of the higher-energy electrons related to suprathermal acceleration (>30 keV). This result indicates that the electron acceleration processes for the flat-top-type distributions are different from the suprathermal components, both of which are beyond the conventional MHD outflow acceleration and considered to be associated with some kinetic processes.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Cluster observations of an ion‐scale current sheet in the magnetotail under the presence of a guide field

R. Nakamura; W. Baumjohann; M. Fujimoto; Y. Asano; A. Runov; C. J. Owen; Andrew N. Fazakerley; B. Klecker; H. Rème; Elizabeth A. Lucek; Mats André; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev

We report on Cluster observations of a thin current sheet interval under the presence of a strong vertical bar B-Y vertical bar during a fast earthward flow interval between 1655 UT and 1703 UT on 17 August 2003. The strong vertical bar B-Y vertical bar in the tail could be associated with a strong IMF vertical bar B-Y vertical bar, but the large fluctuations in B-Y, not seen in the IMF, suggest that a varying reconnection rate causes a varying transport of B-Y-dominated magnetic flux and/or a change in B-Y due to the Hall-current system. During the encounter of the high-speed flow, an intense current layer was observed around 1655: 53 UT with a peak current density of 182 nA/m(2), the largest current density observed by the Cluster four-spacecraft magnetic field measurement in the magnetotail. The half width of this current layer was estimated to be similar to 290 km, which was comparable to the ion-inertia length. Its unique signature is that the strong current is mainly field-aligned current flowing close to the center of the plasma sheet. The event was associated with parallel heating of electrons with asymmetries, which suggests that electrons moving along the field lines can contribute to a strong dawn-to-dusk current when the magnetotail current sheet becomes sufficiently thin and active in a strong guide field case.


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

Multispacecraft observations of the electron current sheet, neighboring magnetic islands, and electron acceleration during magnetotail reconnection

Li-Jen Chen; Naoki Bessho; Bertrand Lefebvre; H. Vaith; Arne Asnes; Ondrej Santolik; Andrew N. Fazakerley; Pamela Ann Puhl-Quinn; A. Bhattacharjee; Yuri Khotyaintsev; P. W. Daly; R. B. Torbert

Open questions concerning structures and dynamics of diffusion regions and electron acceleration in collisionless magnetic reconnection are addressed based on data from the four-spacecraft mission Cluster and particle-in-cell simulations. Using time series of electron distribution functions measured by the four spacecraft, distinct electron regions around a reconnection layer are mapped out to set the framework for studying diffusion regions. A spatially extended electron current sheet (ecs), a series of magnetic islands, and bursts of energetic electrons within islands are identified during magnetotail reconnection with no appreciable guide field. The ecs is collocated with a layer of electron-scale electric fields normal to the ecs and pointing toward the ecs center plane. Both the observed electron and ion densities vary by more than a factor of 2 within one ion skin depth north and south of the ecs, and from the ecs into magnetic islands. Within each of the identified islands, there is a burst of supr...

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M. W. Dunlop

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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C. J. Owen

University College London

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H. Rème

University of Toulouse

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A. Balogh

Imperial College London

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Y. V. Bogdanova

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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W. Baumjohann

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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B. Lavraud

University of Toulouse

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C. M. Carr

Imperial College London

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