Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Olivier Le Contel is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Olivier Le Contel.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Wave normal angles of whistler mode chorus rising and falling tones

Ulrich Taubenschuss; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; Ondrej Santolik; Andris Vaivads; C. M. Cully; Olivier Le Contel; V. Angelopoulos

We present a study of wave normal angles (θk) of whistler mode chorus emission as observed by Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS) during the year 2008. The three inner THEMIS satellites THA, THD, and THE usually orbit Earth close to the dipole magnetic equator (±20°), covering a large range of L shells from the plasmasphere out to the magnetopause. Waveform measurements of electric and magnetic fields enable a detailed polarization analysis of chorus below 4 kHz. When displayed in a frequency-θk histogram, four characteristic regions of occurrence are evident. They are separated by gaps at f/fc,e≈0.5 (f is the chorus frequency, fc,e is the local electron cyclotron frequency) and at θk∼40°. Below θk∼40°, the average value for θk is predominantly field aligned, but slightly increasing with frequency toward half of fc,e (θk up to 20°). Above half of fc,e, the average θk is again decreasing with frequency. Above θk∼40°, wave normal angles are usually close to the resonance cone angle. Furthermore, we present a detailed comparison of electric and magnetic fields of chorus rising and falling tones. Falling tones exhibit peaks in occurrence solely for θk>40° and are propagating close to the resonance cone angle. Nevertheless, when comparing rising tones to falling tones at θk>40°, the ratio of magnetic to electric field shows no significant differences. Thus, we conclude that falling tones are generated under similar conditions as rising tones, with common source regions close to the magnetic equatorial plane.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

What is the nature of magnetosheath FTEs

A. Roux; Patrick Robert; Dominique Fontaine; Olivier Le Contel; P. Canu; P. Louarn

Cluster multipoint measurements are used to study two successive magnetosheath flux transfer events (FTEs). Magnetic field lines in the leading region are found to be closed magnetospheric field lines. For event 1 these field lines are wounded up by a large current structure oriented eastward and moving poleward. Conversely, the trailing region corresponds to opened magnetic field lines. For both events the leading edge of the FTEs is a tangential discontinuity separating the magnetosheath from closed field lines. In the case of event 1 magnetosheath ions are accelerated through the FTE trailing edge via a rotational discontinuity and penetrate on closed field lines through a second discontinuity. Thus, the ion jet is accelerated equatorward of the spacecraft but the backtracking of the discontinuities and the lack of dispersion show that ion acceleration occurs at less than 2 RE from Cluster. On the other hand the extrapolation forward indicates that the FTE bulge steepens as in simulations of Dorelli and Bhattacharjee (2009). Evidence is given for the penetration of magnetosheath ions inside the core of the FTE, on closed field lines. Magnetosheath electrons are accelerated in parallel and antiparallel directions on open and on closed field lines, thus breaking the frozen-in condition. Event 2 is also split in two distinct regions but no evidence is found for accelerated bidirectional magnetosheath electrons. For event 2 the two discontinuities at the trailing region are stacked together when they are crossed by the spacecraft, suggesting that the current splitting is a reconnection signature.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Different types of whistler mode chorus in the equatorial source region

Ulrich Taubenschuss; Ondrej Santolik; D. B. Graham; Huishan Fu; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; Olivier Le Contel

The Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms-D spacecraft crossed an active equatorial source region of whistler mode chorus rising tones on 23 October 2008. Rising tones are analyzed in terms of spectral and polarization characteristics, with special emphasis on wave normal angles. The latter exhibit large variations from quasi-parallel to oblique, even within single bursts, but seem to follow a definite pattern, which enables an unambiguous classification into five different groups. Furthermore, we discuss the frequently observed splitting of chorus bursts into a lower and an upper band around one half of the local electron cyclotron frequency. At chorus frequencies close to the gap, we find significantly lowered wave planarities and a tendency of wave normal angles to approach the Gendrin angle.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Poynting Vector and Wave Vector Directions of Equatorial Chorus

Ulrich Taubenschuss; Ondřej Santolík; H. Breuillard; Wen Li; Olivier Le Contel

We present new results on wave vectors and Poynting vectors of chorus rising and falling tones on the basis of 6 years of THEMIS (Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms) observations. The majority of wave vectors is closely aligned with the direction of the ambient magnetic field (B0). Oblique wave vectors are confined to the magnetic meridional plane, pointing away from Earth. Poynting vectors are found to be almost parallel to B0. We show, for the first time, that slightly oblique Poynting vectors are directed away from Earth for rising tones and towards Earth for falling tones. For the majority of lower band chorus elements, the mutual orientation between Poynting vectors and wave vectors can be explained by whistler mode dispersion in a homogeneous collisionless cold plasma. Upper band chorus seems to require inclusion of collisional processes or taking into account azimuthal anisotropies in the propagation medium. The latitudinal extension of the equatorial source region can be limited to ±6∘ around the B0-minimum, or approximately ±5000 km along magnetic field lines. We find increasing Poynting flux and focusing of Poynting vectors on the B0-direction with increasing latitude. Also wave vectors become most often more field-aligned. A smaller group of chorus generated with very oblique wave normals tends to stay close to the whistler mode resonance cone. This suggests that close to the equatorial source region (within ∼20∘ latitude), a wave guidance mechanism is relevant, for example in ducts of depleted or enhanced plasma density.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Multiscale Currents Observed by MMS in the Flow Braking Region

R. Nakamura; A. Varsani; K. J. Genestreti; Olivier Le Contel; T. K. M. Nakamura; W. Baumjohann; Tsugunobu Nagai; A. V. Artemyev; Joachim Birn; V. A. Sergeev; S. Apatenkov; R. E. Ergun; S. A. Fuselier; Daniel J. Gershman; B. Giles; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; Per-Arne Lindqvist; W. Magnes; B. H. Mauk; A. A. Petrukovich; C. T. Russell; J. E. Stawarz; Robert J. Strangeway; Brian A. Anderson; J. L. Burch; Ken R. Bromund; I. J. Cohen; D. Fischer; A. N. Jaynes; L. Kepko

Abstract We present characteristics of current layers in the off‐equatorial near‐Earth plasma sheet boundary observed with high time‐resolution measurements from the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission during an intense substorm associated with multiple dipolarizations. The four Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft, separated by distances of about 50 km, were located in the southern hemisphere in the dusk portion of a substorm current wedge. They observed fast flow disturbances (up to about 500 km/s), most intense in the dawn‐dusk direction. Field‐aligned currents were observed initially within the expanding plasma sheet, where the flow and field disturbances showed the distinct pattern expected in the braking region of localized flows. Subsequently, intense thin field‐aligned current layers were detected at the inner boundary of equatorward moving flux tubes together with Earthward streaming hot ions. Intense Hall current layers were found adjacent to the field‐aligned currents. In particular, we found a Hall current structure in the vicinity of the Earthward streaming ion jet that consisted of mixed ion components, that is, hot unmagnetized ions, cold E × B drifting ions, and magnetized electrons. Our observations show that both the near‐Earth plasma jet diversion and the thin Hall current layers formed around the reconnection jet boundary are the sites where diversion of the perpendicular currents take place that contribute to the observed field‐aligned current pattern as predicted by simulations of reconnection jets. Hence, multiscale structure of flow braking is preserved in the field‐aligned currents in the off‐equatorial plasma sheet and is also translated to ionosphere to become a part of the substorm field‐aligned current system.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Energy budget and mechanisms of cold ion heating in asymmetric magnetic reconnection

S. Toledo-Redondo; Mats André; Yuri V. Khotyaintsev; B. Lavraud; Andris Vaivads; D. B. Graham; Wenya Li; D. Perrone; S. A. Fuselier; Daniel J. Gershman; N. Aunai; Jérémy Dargent; B. L. Giles; Olivier Le Contel; Per-Arne Lindqvist; R. E. Ergun; C. T. Russell; J. L. Burch

Cold ions (few tens of eV) of ionospheric origin are commonly observed on the magnetospheric side of the Earths dayside magnetopause. As a result, they can participate in magnetic reconnection, ch ...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Observational evidence of electron pitch angle scattering driven by ECH waves

Satoshi Kurita; Yoshizumi Miyoshi; C. M. Cully; V. Angelopoulos; Olivier Le Contel; Mitsuru Hikishima; Hiroaki Misawa

Using the plasma wave and electron data obtained from Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms, we show a signature of electron pitch angle scattering driven by Electrostatic Cyclotron Harmonic (ECH) waves in the velocity distribution function (VDF). The diffusion curve of whistler mode waves is used as a proxy to identify changes in VDFs due to wave-particle interactions. We confirm that the shape of the VDF well agrees with the diffusion curve of whistler mode waves when whistler mode chorus alone is active. On the other hand, we find that the shape of the VDF deviates from the diffusion curves at low pitch angles when ECH waves are active following the inactivation of chorus waves. The result is observational support for electron pitch angle scattering caused by ECH waves and suggests that ECH waves can contribute to generation of diffuse auroras.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Statistical Study of the Properties of Magnetosheath Lion Roars

Stefanos Giagkiozis; L. B. Wilson; J. L. Burch; Olivier Le Contel; R. E. Ergun; D. J. Gershman; Per-Arne Lindqvist; L. Mirioni; T. E. Moore; Robert J. Strangeway

Lion roars are narrowband whistler wave emissions that have been observed in several environments, such as planetary magnetosheaths, the Earth’s magnetosphere, the solar wind, downstream of interplanetary shocks, and the cusp region. We present measurements of more than 30,000 such emissions observed by the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft with high-cadence (8,192 samples/s) search coil magnetometer data. A semiautomatic algorithm was used to identify the emissions, and an adaptive interval algorithm in conjunction with minimum variance analysis was used to determine their wave vector. The properties of the waves are determined in both the spacecraft and plasma rest frame. The mean wave normal angle, with respect to the background magnetic field (B0), plasma bulk flow velocity (Vb), and the coplanarity plane (Vb × B0) are 23°, 56°, and 0°, respectively. The average peak frequencies were ~31% of the electron gyrofrequency (ωce) observed in the spacecraft frame and ~18% of ωce in the plasma rest frame. In the spacecraft frame, ~99% of the emissions had a frequency < ωce, while 98% had a peak frequency < 0.72 ωce in the plasma rest frame. None of the waves had frequencies lower than the lower hybrid frequency, ω. From the probability density function of the electron plasma βe, the ratio between the electron thermal and magnetic pressure, ~99.6% of the waves were observed with βe < 4 with a large narrow peak at 0.07 and two smaller, but wider, peaks at 1.26 and 2.28, while the average value was ~1.25.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

Global distribution of electrostatic electron cyclotron harmonic waves observed on THEMIS

Binbin Ni; Richard M. Thorne; Jun Liang; V. Angelopoulos; C. M. Cully; Wen Li; Xiaojia Zhang; M. D. Hartinger; Olivier Le Contel; A. Roux


Geophysical Research Letters | 2012

Source location of falling tone chorus

Satoshi Kurita; Hiroaki Misawa; C. M. Cully; Olivier Le Contel; V. Angelopoulos

Collaboration


Dive into the Olivier Le Contel's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter Robert

University of Paris-Sud

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. E. Ergun

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. T. Russell

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. J. Fontaine

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yuri V. Khotyaintsev

Swedish Institute of Space Physics

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Per-Arne Lindqvist

Royal Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. L. Burch

Southwest Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge