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Dive into the research topics where J. Needell is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Needell.


Space Science Reviews | 1995

Hydra — A 3-dimensional electron and ion hot plasma instrument for the POLAR spacecraft of the GGS mission

J. D. Scudder; F. Hunsacker; G. Miller; J. Lobell; T. Zawistowski; K. W. Ogilvie; John W. Keller; D. Chornay; F. Herrero; R. Fitzenreiter; D. Fairfield; J. Needell; D. Bodet; J. Googins; C. A. Kletzing; R. B. Torbert; J. Vandiver; R. Bentley; W. Fillius; C. McIlwain; E. Whipple; A. Korth

HYDRA is an experimental hot plasma investigation for the POLAR spacecraft of the GGS program. A consortium of institutions has designed a suite of particle analyzers that sample the velocity space of electron and ions between ≃2 keV/q – 35 keV/q in three dimensions, with a routine time resolution of 0.5 s. Routine coverage of velocity space will be accomplished with an angular homogeneity assumption of ≃16°, appropriate for subsonic plasmas, but with special ≃1.5° resolution for electrons with energies between 100 eV and 10 keV along and opposed to the local magnetic field. This instrument produces 4.9 kilobits s−1 to the telemetry, consumes on average 14 W and requires 18.7 kg for deployment including its internal shielding. The scientific objectives for the polar magnetosphere fall into four broad categories: (1) those to define the ambient kinetic regimes of ions and electrons; (2) those to elucidate the magnetohydrodynamic responses in these regimes; (3) those to assess the particle populations with high time resolution; and (4) those to determine the global topology of the magnetic field. In thefirst group are issues of identifying the origins of particles at high magnetic latitudes, their energization, the altitude dependence of the forces, including parallel electric fields they have traversed. In thesecond group are the physics of the fluid flows, regimes of current, and plasma depletion zones during quiescent and disturbed magnetic conditions. In thethird group is the exploration of the processes that accompany the rapid time variations known to occur in the auroral zone, cusp and entry layers as they affect the flow of mass, momentum and energy in the auroral region. In thefourth class of objectives are studies in conjunction with the SWE measurements of the Strahl in the solar wind that exploit the small gyroradius of thermal electrons to detect those magnetic field lines that penetrate the auroral region that are directly ‘open’ to interplanetary space where, for example, the Polar Rain is observed.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Whistler mode waves and Hall fields detected by MMS during a dayside magnetopause crossing

O. Le Contel; A. Retinò; H. Breuillard; L. Mirioni; Peter Robert; A. Chasapis; B. Lavraud; Thomas Chust; Laurence Rezeau; F. D. Wilder; D. B. Graham; M. R. Argall; D. J. Gershman; Per-Arne Lindqvist; Y. V. Khotyaintsev; Göran Marklund; R. E. Ergun; K. A. Goodrich; J. L. Burch; R. B. Torbert; J. Needell; M. Chutter; D. Rau; I. Dors; C. T. Russell; W. Magnes; R. J. Strangeway; K. R. Bromund; H. K. Leinweber; F. Plaschke

We present Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission measurements during a full magnetopause crossing associated with an enhanced southward ion flow. A quasi-steady magnetospheric whistler mode wave ...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Multispacecraft analysis of dipolarization fronts and associated whistler wave emissions using MMS data

H. Breuillard; O. Le Contel; A. Retinò; A. Chasapis; T. Chust; L. Mirioni; D. B. Graham; F. D. Wilder; I. J. Cohen; Andris Vaivads; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; P.-A. Lindqvist; Göran Marklund; J. L. Burch; R. B. Torbert; R. E. Ergun; K. A. Goodrich; J. Macri; J. Needell; M. Chutter; D. Rau; I. Dors; C. T. Russell; W. Magnes; R. J. Strangeway; K. R. Bromund; F. Plaschke; D. Fischer; H. K. Leinweber; Brian J. Anderson

Dipolarization fronts (DFs), embedded in bursty bulk flows, play a crucial role in Earths plasma sheet dynamics because the energy input from the solar wind is partly dissipated in their vicinity. This dissipation is in the form of strong low-frequency waves that can heat and accelerate energetic electrons up to the high-latitude plasma sheet. However, the dynamics of DF propagation and associated low-frequency waves in the magnetotail are still under debate due to instrumental limitations and spacecraft separation distances. In May 2015 the Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission was in a string-of-pearls configuration with an average intersatellite distance of 160 km, which allows us to study in detail the microphysics of DFs. Thus, in this letter we employ MMS data to investigate the properties of dipolarization fronts propagating earthward and associated whistler mode wave emissions. We show that the spatial dynamics of DFs are below the ion gyroradius scale in this region (∼500 km), which can modify the dynamics of ions in the vicinity of the DF (e.g., making their motion nonadiabatic). We also show that whistler wave dynamics have a temporal scale of the order of the ion gyroperiod (a few seconds), indicating that the perpendicular temperature anisotropy can vary on such time scales.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

Electron Heating at Kinetic Scales in Magnetosheath Turbulence

A. Chasapis; William H. Matthaeus; T. N. Parashar; O. LeContel; A. Retinò; H. Breuillard; Y. V. Khotyaintsev; Andris Vaivads; B. Lavraud; T. E. Moore; J. L. Burch; R. B. Torbert; Per-Arne Lindqvist; R. E. Ergun; Göran Marklund; K. A. Goodrich; F. D. Wilder; M. Chutter; J. Needell; D. Rau; I. Dors; C. T. Russell; G. Le; W. Magnes; R. J. Strangeway; K. R. Bromund; H. K. Leinweber; F. Plaschke; D. Fischer; Brian J. Anderson

We present a statistical study of coherent structures at kinetic scales, using data from the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission in the Earths magnetosheath. We implemented the multi-spacecraft part ...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Lower Hybrid Drift Waves and Electromagnetic Electron Space‐Phase Holes Associated With Dipolarization Fronts and Field‐Aligned Currents Observed by the Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission During a Substorm

O. Le Contel; R. Nakamura; H. Breuillard; M. R. Argall; D. B. Graham; D. Fischer; A. Retinò; M. Berthomier; R. Pottelette; L. Mirioni; Thomas Chust; F. D. Wilder; D. J. Gershman; A. Varsani; P.-A. Lindqvist; Yu. V. Khotyaintsev; C. Norgren; R. E. Ergun; K. A. Goodrich; J. L. Burch; R. B. Torbert; J. Needell; M. Chutter; D. Rau; I. Dors; C. T. Russell; W. Magnes; R. J. Strangeway; K. R. Bromund; Hanying Wei

We analyse two ion scale dipolarization fronts associated with field-aligned currents detected by the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission during a large substorm on August 10, 2016. The first event corresponds to a fast dawnward flow with an anti-parallel current and could be generated by the wake of a previous fast earthward flow. It is associated with intense lower-hybrid drift waves detected at the front and propagating dawnward with a perpendicular phase speed close to the electric drift and the ion thermal velocity. The second event corresponds to a flow reversal: from southwward/dawnward to northward/duskward associated with a parallel current consistent with a brief expansion of the plasma sheet before the front crossing, and with a smaller lower-hybrid drift wave activity. Electromagnetic electron phase-space holes are detected near these low-frequency drift waves during both events. The drift waves could accelerate electrons parallel to the magnetic field and produce the parallel electron drift needed to generate the electron holes. Yet, we cannot rule out the possibility that the drift waves are produced by the anti-parallel current associated with the fast flows, leaving the source for the electron holes unexplained.


Space Science Reviews | 2016

The FIELDS Instrument Suite on MMS: Scientific Objectives, Measurements, and Data Products

R. B. Torbert; C. T. Russell; W. Magnes; R. E. Ergun; Per-Arne Lindqvist; O. LeContel; H. Vaith; J. Macri; S. Myers; D. Rau; J. Needell; B. King; M. Granoff; M. Chutter; I. Dors; Göran Olsson; Y. V. Khotyaintsev; Anders Eriksson; C. A. Kletzing; Scott Randolph Bounds; Brian A. Anderson; W. Baumjohann; M. Steller; K. R. Bromund; G. Le; R. Nakamura; R. J. Strangeway; H. K. Leinweber; S. Tucker; J. Westfall


Space Science Reviews | 2016

The Axial Double Probe and Fields Signal Processing for the MMS Mission

R. E. Ergun; S. Tucker; J. Westfall; K. A. Goodrich; D. M. Malaspina; D. Summers; J. Wallace; Magnus Karlsson; J. Mack; N. Brennan; B. Pyke; P. Withnell; R. B. Torbert; J. Macri; D. Rau; I. Dors; J. Needell; Per-Arne Lindqvist; Göran Olsson; C. M. Cully


Space Science Reviews | 2016

The Search-Coil Magnetometer for MMS

O. Le Contel; P. Leroy; A. Roux; Christophe Coillot; D. Alison; A. Bouabdellah; L. Mirioni; L. Meslier; A. Galic; M. C. Vassal; R. B. Torbert; J. Needell; D. Rau; I. Dors; R. E. Ergun; J. Westfall; D. Summers; J. Wallace; W. Magnes; A. Valavanoglou; Göran Olsson; M. Chutter; J. Macri; S. Myers; S. Turco; J. Nolin; D. Bodet; K. Rowe; M. Tanguy; B. de la Porte


Space Science Reviews | 2016

The Electron Drift Instrument for MMS

R. B. Torbert; H. Vaith; M. Granoff; M. Widholm; J. A. Gaidos; B. H. Briggs; I. Dors; M. Chutter; J. Macri; M. R. Argall; D. Bodet; J. Needell; M. B. Steller; W. Baumjohann; R. Nakamura; F. Plaschke; H. Ottacher; J. Hasiba; K. Hofmann; C. A. Kletzing; Scott Randolph Bounds; R. T. Dvorsky; K. Sigsbee; V. Kooi


arXiv: Space Physics | 2018

The Fluxgate-Searchcoil Merged (FSM) Magnetic Field Data Product for MMS.

M. R. Argall; D. Fischer; O. Le Contel; L. Mirioni; R. B. Torbert; I. Dors; M. Chutter; J. Needell; R. J. Strangeway; W. Magnes; C. T. Russell

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R. B. Torbert

University of New Hampshire

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I. Dors

University of New Hampshire

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M. Chutter

University of New Hampshire

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D. Rau

University of New Hampshire

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R. E. Ergun

University of Colorado Boulder

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W. Magnes

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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C. T. Russell

University of California

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K. A. Goodrich

University of Colorado Boulder

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K. R. Bromund

Goddard Space Flight Center

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