Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where J. P. McFadden is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by J. P. McFadden.


Space Science Reviews | 1995

A three-dimensional plasma and energetic particle investigation for the wind spacecraft

Robert P. Lin; K. A. Anderson; S. Ashford; Charles W. Carlson; D. W. Curtis; R. E. Ergun; D. Larson; J. P. McFadden; Michael P. McCarthy; G. K. Parks; H. Rème; J. M. Bosqued; J. Coutelier; F. Cotin; C. d'Uston; K. P. Wenzel; T. R. Sanderson; J. P. G. Henrion; J. C. Ronnet; G. Paschmann

This instrument is designed to make measurements of the full three-dimensional distribution of suprathermal electrons and ions from solar wind plasma to low energy cosmic rays, with high sensitivity, wide dynamic range, good energy and angular resolution, and high time resolution. The primary scientific goals are to explore the suprathermal particle population between the solar wind and low energy cosmic rays, to study particle accleration and transport and wave-particle interactions, and to monitor particle input to and output from the Earths magnetosphere.Three arrays, each consisting of a pair of double-ended semi-conductor telescopes each with two or three closely sandwiched passivated ion implanted silicon detectors, measure electrons and ions above ∼20 keV. One side of each telescope is covered with a thin foil which absorbs ions below 400 keV, while on the other side the incoming <400 keV electrons are swept away by a magnet so electrons and ions are cleanly separated. Higher energy electrons (up to ∼1 MeV) and ions (up to 11 MeV) are identified by the two double-ended telescopes which have a third detector. The telescopes provide energy resolution of ΔE/E≈0.3 and angular resolution of 22.5°×36°, and full 4π steradian coverage in one spin (3 s).Top-hat symmetrical spherical section electrostatic analyzers with microchannel plate detectors are used to measure ions and electrons from ∼3 eV to 30 keV. All these analyzers have either 180° or 360° fields of view in a plane, ΔE/E≈0.2, and angular resolution varying from 5.6° (near the ecliptic) to 22.5°. Full 4π steradian coverage can be obtained in one-half or one spin. A large and a small geometric factor analyzer measure ions over the wide flux range from quiet-time suprathermal levels to intense solar wind fluxes. Similarly two analyzers are used to cover the wide range of electron fluxes. Moments of the electron and ion distributions are computed on board.In addition, a Fast Particle Correlator combines electron data from the high sensitivity electron analyzer with plasma wave data from the WAVE experiment (Bougeretet al., in this volume) to study wave-particle interactions on fast time scales. The large geometric factor electron analyzer has electrostatic deflectors to steer the field of view and follow the magnetic field to enhance the correlation measurements.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2009

THEMIS observations of an earthward‐propagating dipolarization front

A. Runov; V. Angelopoulos; M. I. Sitnov; V. A. Sergeev; J. W. Bonnell; J. P. McFadden; D. Larson; Karl-Heinz Glassmeier; U. Auster

[1] We report THEMIS observations of a dipolarization front, a sharp, large-amplitude increase in the Z-component of the magnetic field. The front was detected in the central plasma sheet sequentially at X = -20.1 R E (THEMIS P1 probe), at X = -16.7 R E (P2), and at X = -11.0 R E (P3/P4 pair), suggesting its earthward propagation as a coherent structure over a distance more than 10 R E at a velocity of 300 km/s. The front thickness was found to be as small as the ion inertial length. Comparison with simulations allows us to interpret the front as the leading edge of a plasma fast flow formed by a burst of magnetic reconnection in the midtail.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1998

FAST satellite observations of large‐amplitude solitary structures

R. E. Ergun; C. W. Carlson; J. P. McFadden; F. S. Mozer; G. T. Delory; W. Peria; C. C. Chaston; M. Temerin; I. Roth; L. Muschietti; R. C. Elphic; Robert J. Strangeway; R. F. Pfaff; C. A. Cattell; D. M. Klumpar; E. G. Shelley; W. K. Peterson; E. Moebius; L. M. Kistler

We report observations of “fast solitary waves” that are ubiquitous in downward current regions of the mid-altitude auroral zone. The single-period structures have large amplitudes (up to 2.5 V/m), travel much faster than the ion acoustic speed, carry substantial potentials (up to ∼100 Volts), and are associated with strong modulations of energetic electron fluxes. The amplitude and speed of the structures distinguishes them from ion-acoustic solitary waves or weak double layers. The electromagnetic signature appears to be that of an positive charge (electron hole) traveling anti-earthward. We present evidence that the structures are in or near regions of magnetic-field-aligned electric fields and propose that these nonlinear structures play a key role in supporting parallel electric fields in the downward current region of the auroral zone.


Space Science Reviews | 1997

The Cluster Ion Spectrometry (CIS) Experiment

H. Rème; J. M. Bosqued; J.-A. Sauvaud; A. Cros; J. Dandouras; C. Aoustin; J. Bouyssou; Th. Camus; J. Cuvilo; Ch. Martz; J. L. Médale; H. Perrier; D. Romefort; J. Rouzaud; C. D'Uston; E. Möbius; K. Crocker; M. Granoff; L. M. Kistler; M. Popecki; D. Hovestadt; B. Klecker; Götz Paschmann; M. Scholer; C. W. Carlson; D. W. Curtis; Robert P. Lin; J. P. McFadden; V. Formisano; Ermanno Amata

The Cluster Ion Spectrometry (CIS) experiment is a comprehensive ionic plasma spectrometry package on-board the four Cluster spacecraft capable of obtaining full three-dimensional ion distributions with good time resolution (one spacecraft spin) with mass per charge composition determination. The requirements to cover the scientific objectives cannot be met with a single instrument. The CIS package therefore consists of two different instruments, a Hot Ion Analyser (HIA) and a time-of-flight ion COmposition and DIstribution Function analyser (CODIF), plus a sophisticated dual-processor-based instrument-control and Data-Processing System (DPS), which permits extensive on-board data-processing. Both analysers use symmetric optics resulting in continuous, uniform, and well-characterised phase space coverage. CODIF measures the distributions of the major ions (H+, He+, He++, and O+) with energies from ~0 to 40 keV/e with medium (22.5°) angular resolution and two different sensitivities. HIA does not offer mass resolution but, also having two different sensitivities, increases the dynamic range, and has an angular resolution capability (5.6° × 5.6°) adequate for ion-beam and solar-wind measurements.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1998

FAST observations in the downward auroral current region: Energetic upgoing electron beams, parallel potential drops, and ion heating

C. W. Carlson; J. P. McFadden; R. E. Ergun; M. Temerin; W. Peria; F. S. Mozer; D. M. Klumpar; E. G. Shelley; W. K. Peterson; E. Moebius; R. C. Elphic; Robert J. Strangeway; C. A. Cattell; R. F. Pfaff

Observations of plasma particles and fields by the FAST satellite find evidence of acceleration of intense upgoing electron beams by quasi-static parallel electric fields. The beam characteristics include a broad energy spectrum with peak energies between 100 eV and 5 keV, perpendicular temperatures less than 1 eV, and fluxes greater than 109/cm²sec. Diverging electrostatic shocks associated with the beams have integrated potentials that match the beam energy. These beams are found in regions of downward Birkeland current and account for the total field-aligned current when they are present. The most energetic ion conics in the auroral zone are found coincident with these beams, in agreement with the model for “trapped” conics. The measured particle densities of the electron beams and associated ion conics are approximately equal and typically range from 1 to 10 cm−3, with no evidence for additional cold density. The beams are seen frequently at altitudes between 2000 and 4000 km in the winter auroral zone. Their probability of occurrence has a strong dependence on season and altitude and is similar to that for upgoing ion beams in the adjacent upward current regions. This similarity suggests that the density and scale height of ionospheric ions play an important role in the formation of both types of beams.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1998

FAST satellite observations of electric field structures in the auroral zone

R. E. Ergun; C. W. Carlson; J. P. McFadden; F. S. Mozer; G. T. Delory; W. Peria; C. C. Chaston; M. Temerin; R. C. Elphic; Robert J. Strangeway; R. F. Pfaff; C. A. Cattell; D. M. Klumpar; E. G. Shelley; W. K. Peterson; E. Moebius; L. M. Kistler

Electric field and energetic particle observations by the Fast Auroral Snapshot (FAST) satellite provide convincing evidence of particle acceleration by quasi-static, magnetic-field-aligned (parallel) electric fields in both the upward and downward current regions of the auroral zone. We demonstrate this by comparing the inferred parallel potentials of electrostatic shocks with particle energies. We also report nonlinear electric field structures which may play a role in supporting parallel electric fields. These structures include large-amplitude ion cyclotron waves in the upward current region, and intense, spiky electric fields in the downward current region. The observed structures had substantial parallel components and correlative electron flux modulations. Observations of parallel electric fields in two distinct plasmas suggest that parallel electric fields may be a fundamental particle acceleration mechanism in astrophysical plasmas.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2009

Kinetic structure of the sharp injection/dipolarization front in the flow-braking region

V. A. Sergeev; V. Angelopoulos; S. Apatenkov; J. W. Bonnell; R. E. Ergun; R. Nakamura; J. P. McFadden; D. Larson; A. Runov

[1] Observations of three closely-spaced THEMIS spacecraft at 9-11 Re near midnight and close to the neutral sheet are used to investigate a sharp injection/ dipolarization front (SDF) propagating inward in the flow-braking region. This SDF was a very thin current sheet along the North-South direction embedded within an Earthward-propagating flow burst. A short-lived depression of the total magnetic field (down to 1 nT), devoid of wave activity and intense particle fluxes, stays ahead of the SDF. Clear finite proton gyroradius effects, which help visualize the geometry and sub-gyroscale of the SDF, are seen centered at the thin current sheet. The SDF nearly coincides with the narrow interface between plasmas of different densities and temperatures. At that interface, we observed strong (40―60 mV/m peak) E-field bursts of the lower-hybrid time scale that are confined to a localized region of density depletions. This sharp dipolarization/injection front propagating in the flow-braking region appears to be a complicated kinetic-scale plasma structure that combines a number of small-scale elements (Bz drops, thin current sheets, LH cavities, injection fronts) previously discussed as separate objects.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1998

FAST satellite wave observations in the AKR source region

R. E. Ergun; C. W. Carlson; J. P. McFadden; F. S. Mozer; G. T. Delory; W. Peria; C. C. Chaston; M. Temerin; R. C. Elphic; Robert J. Strangeway; R. F. Pfaff; C. A. Cattell; D. M. Klumpar; E. G. Shelley; W. K. Peterson; E. Moebius; L. M. Kistler

The Fast Auroral SnapshoT (FAST) satellite has made observations in the Auroral Kilometric Radiation (AKR) source region with unprecedented frequency and time resolution. We confirm the AKR source is in a density depleted cavity and present examples in which cold electrons appeared to have been nearly evacuated (nhot> ncold). Electron distributions were depleted at low-energies and up-going ion beams were always present. Source region amplitudes were far greater than previously reported, reaching 2×10−4 (V/m)²/Hz (300 mV/m) in short bursts with bandwidths generally <1 kHz. Intense emissions were often at the edge of the density cavity. Emissions were near or below the cold plasma electron cyclotron frequency in the source region, and were almost entirely electromagnetic. The |E|/|B| ratio was constant as a function of frequency and rarely displayed any features that would identify a cold plasma cutoff or resonance.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

THEMIS analysis of observed equatorial electron distributions responsible for the chorus excitation

W. Li; Richard M. Thorne; Y. Nishimura; J. Bortnik; V. Angelopoulos; J. P. McFadden; D. Larson; J. W. Bonnell; O. Le Contel; Andre Le Roux; U. Auster

[1] A statistical survey of plasma densities and electron distributions (0.5–100 keV) is performed using data obtained from the Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions During Substorms spacecraft in near‐equatorial orbits from 1 July 2007 to 1 May 2009 in order to investigate optimum conditions for whistler mode chorus excitation. The plasma density calculated from the spacecraft potential, together with in situ magnetic field, is used to construct global maps of cyclotron and Landau resonant energies under quiet, moderate, and active geomagnetic conditions. Statistical results show that chorus intensity increases at higher AE index, with the strongest waves confined to regions where the ratio between the plasma frequency and gyrofrequency, fpe/fce, is less than 5. On the nightside, large electron anisotropies and intense chorus emissions indicate remarkable consistency with the confinement to 8 RE. Furthermore, as injected plasma sheet electrons drift from midnight through dawn toward the noon sector, their anisotropy increases and peaks on the dayside at 7 6) on the dayside. In addition, very isotropic distributions at a few keV, which may be produced by Landau resonance and contribute to the formation of the typical gap in the chorus spectrum near 0.5 fce, are commonly observed on the dayside. Citation: Li, W., et al. (2010), THEMIS analysis of observed equatorial electron distributions responsible for the chorus excitation, J. Geophys. Res., 115, A00F11, doi:10.1029/2009JA014845.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1997

Tracing the topology of the October 18–20, 1995, magnetic cloud with ∼0.1–10² keV electrons

D. Larson; R. P. Lin; James M. McTiernan; J. P. McFadden; R. E. Ergun; Michael P. McCarthy; H. Rème; T. R. Sanderson; M. L. Kaiser; R. P. Lepping; J. E. Mazur

Five solar impulsive ∼1–10² keV electron events were detected while the WIND spacecraft was inside the magnetic cloud observed upstream of the Earth on October 18–20, 1995. The solar type III radio bursts produced by these electrons can be directly traced from ∼1 AU back to X-ray flares in solar active region AR 7912, implying that at least one leg of the cloud was magnetically connected to that region. Analysis of the electron arrival times shows that the lengths of magnetic field lines in that leg vary from ∼3 AU near the cloud exterior to ∼1.2 AU near the cloud center, consistent with a model force-free helical flux rope. Although the cloud magnetic field exhibits the smooth, continuous rotation signature of a helical flux rope, the ∼0.1-1 keV heat flux electrons and ∼1–10² keV energetic electrons show numerous simultaneous abrupt changes from bidirectional streaming to unidirectional streaming to complete flux dropouts. We interpret these as evidence for patchy disconnection of one end or both ends of cloud magnetic field lines from the Sun.

Collaboration


Dive into the J. P. McFadden's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. W. Carlson

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Larson

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. E. Ergun

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. W. Bonnell

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bruce M. Jakosky

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

K.-H. Glassmeier

Braunschweig University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. E. P. Connerney

Goddard Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. L. Mitchell

University of California

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge