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Dive into the research topics where S. A. Thaller is active.

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Featured researches published by S. A. Thaller.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Electron densities inferred from plasma wave spectra obtained by the Waves instrument on Van Allen Probes

W. S. Kurth; S. De Pascuale; J. B. Faden; C. A. Kletzing; G. B. Hospodarsky; S. A. Thaller; J. R. Wygant

The twin Van Allen Probe spacecraft, launched in August 2012, carry identical scientific payloads. The Electric and Magnetic Field Instrument Suite and Integrated Science suite includes a plasma wave instrument (Waves) that measures three magnetic and three electric components of plasma waves in the frequency range of 10 Hz to 12 kHz using triaxial search coils and the Electric Fields and Waves triaxial electric field sensors. The Waves instrument also measures a single electric field component of waves in the frequency range of 10 to 500 kHz. A primary objective of the higher-frequency measurements is the determination of the electron density ne at the spacecraft, primarily inferred from the upper hybrid resonance frequency fuh. Considerable work has gone into developing a process and tools for identifying and digitizing the upper hybrid resonance frequency in order to infer the electron density as an essential parameter for interpreting not only the plasma wave data from the mission but also as input to various magnetospheric models. Good progress has been made in developing algorithms to identify fuh and create a data set of electron densities. However, it is often difficult to interpret the plasma wave spectra during active times to identify fuh and accurately determine ne. In some cases, there is no clear signature of the upper hybrid band, and the low-frequency cutoff of the continuum radiation is used. We describe the expected accuracy of ne and issues in the interpretation of the electrostatic wave spectrum.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Effect of EMIC waves on relativistic and ultrarelativistic electron populations: Ground-based and Van Allen Probes observations

M. E. Usanova; A. Drozdov; Ksenia Orlova; Ian R. Mann; Y. Y. Shprits; M. T. Robertson; D. L. Turner; David K. Milling; A. Kale; D. N. Baker; S. A. Thaller; G. D. Reeves; Harlan E. Spence; C. A. Kletzing; J. R. Wygant

We study the effect of electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves on the loss and pitch angle scattering of relativistic and ultrarelativistic electrons during the recovery phase of a moderate geomagnetic storm on 11 October 2012. The EMIC wave activity was observed in situ on the Van Allen Probes and conjugately on the ground across the Canadian Array for Real-time Investigations of Magnetic Activity throughout an extended 18 h interval. However, neither enhanced precipitation of >0.7 MeV electrons nor reductions in Van Allen Probe 90° pitch angle ultrarelativistic electron flux were observed. Computed radiation belt electron pitch angle diffusion rates demonstrate that rapid pitch angle diffusion is confined to low pitch angles and cannot reach 90°. For the first time, from both observational and modeling perspectives, we show evidence of EMIC waves triggering ultrarelativistic (~2–8 MeV) electron loss but which is confined to pitch angles below around 45° and not affecting the core distribution.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Energetic electron injections deep into the inner magnetosphere associated with substorm activity

D. L. Turner; S. G. Claudepierre; J. F. Fennell; T. P. O'Brien; J. B. Blake; Colby L. Lemon; Matina Gkioulidou; Kazue Takahashi; G. D. Reeves; S. A. Thaller; A. Breneman; J. R. Wygant; W. Li; A. Runov; V. Angelopoulos

From a survey of the first nightside season of NASAs Van Allen Probes mission (December 2012 to September 2013), 47 energetic (tens to hundreds of keV) electron injection events were found at L shells ≤ 4, all of which are deeper than any previously reported substorm-related injections. Preliminary details from these events are presented, including how all occurred shortly after dipolarization signatures and injections were observed at higher L shells, how the deepest observed injection was at L ~ 2.5, and, surprisingly, how L ≤ 4 injections are limited in energy to ≤250 keV. We present a detailed case study of one example event revealing that the injection of electrons down to L ~ 3.5 was different from injections observed at higher L and likely resulted from electrons interacting with a fast magnetosonic wave in the Pi2 frequency range inside the plasmasphere. These observations demonstrate that injections occur at very low L shells and may play an important role for inner zone electrons.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Prompt energization of relativistic and highly relativistic electrons during a substorm interval: Van Allen Probes observations

J. C. Foster; Philip J. Erickson; D. N. Baker; S. G. Claudepierre; C. A. Kletzing; W. S. Kurth; G. D. Reeves; S. A. Thaller; Harlan E. Spence; Y. Y. Shprits; J. R. Wygant

University of Minnesota (Van Allen Probes subaward to Massachusetts Institute of Technology)


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Storm time observations of plasmasphere erosion flux in the magnetosphere and ionosphere

J. C. Foster; Philip J. Erickson; Anthea J. Coster; S. A. Thaller; J. Tao; J. R. Wygant; J. W. Bonnell

Plasmasphere erosion carries cold dense plasma of ionospheric origin in a storm-enhanced density plume extending from dusk toward and through the noontime cusp and dayside magnetopause and back across polar latitudes in a polar tongue of ionization. We examine dusk sector (20 MLT) plasmasphere erosion during the 17 March 2013 storm (Dst ~ −130 nT) using simultaneous, magnetically aligned direct sunward ion flux observations at high altitude by Van Allen Probes RBSP-A (at ~3.0 Re) and at ionospheric heights (~840 km) by DMSP F-18. Plasma erosion occurs at both high and low altitudes where the subauroral polarization stream flow overlaps the outer plasmasphere. At ~20 UT, RBSP-A observed ~1.2E12 m−2 s−1 erosion flux, while DMSP F-18 observed ~2E13 m−2 s−1 sunward flux. We find close similarities at high and low altitudes between the erosion plume in both invariant latitude spatial extent and plasma characteristics.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Storm time occurrence and spatial distribution of Pc4 poloidal ULF waves in the inner magnetosphere: A Van Allen Probes statistical study

Lei Dai; Kazue Takahashi; Robert L. Lysak; Chi Wang; J. R. Wygant; C. A. Kletzing; J. W. Bonnell; C. A. Cattell; Charles W. Smith; Robert J. MacDowall; S. A. Thaller; A. Breneman; Xiangwei Tang; Xin Tao; Lunjin Chen

Poloidal ULF waves are capable of efficiently interacting with energetic particles in the ring current and the radiation belt. Using Van Allen Probes (Radiation Belt Storm Probes (RBSP)) data from October 2012 to July 2014, we investigate the spatial distribution and storm time occurrence of Pc4 (7-25mHz) poloidal waves in the inner magnetosphere. Pc4 poloidal waves are sorted into two categories: waves with and without significant magnetic compressional components. Two types of poloidal waves have comparable occurrence rates, both of which are much higher during geomagnetic storms. The noncompressional poloidal waves mostly occur in the late recovery phase associated with an increase of Dst toward 0, suggesting that the decay of the ring current provides their free energy source. The occurrence of dayside compressional Pc4 poloidal waves is found correlated with the variation of the solar wind dynamic pressure, indicating their origin in the solar wind. Both compressional and noncompressional waves preferentially occur on the dayside near noon at L similar to 5-6. In addition, compressional poloidal waves are observed at magnetic local time 18-24 on the nightside. The location of the Pc4 poloidal waves relative to the plasmapause is investigated. The RBSP statistical results may shed light on the in-depth investigations of the generation and propagation of Pc4 poloidal waves.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Evidence for injection of relativistic electrons into the Earth's outer radiation belt via intense substorm electric fields

Lei Dai; J. R. Wygant; C. A. Cattell; S. A. Thaller; K. Kersten; A. Breneman; Xiangwei Tang; Reiner H Friedel; S. G. Claudepierre; Xin Tao

Observation and model results accumulated in the last decade indicate that substorms can promptly inject relativistic ‘killer’ electrons (≥MeV) in addition to 10–100 keV subrelativistic populations. Using measurements from Cluster, Polar, LANL, and GOES satellites near the midnight sector, we show in two events that intense electric fields, as large as 20 mV/m, associated with substorm dipolarization are associated with injections of relativistic electrons into the outer radiation belt. Enhancements of hundreds of keV electrons at dipolarization in the magnetotail can account for the injected MeV electrons through earthward transport. These observations provide evidence that substorm electric fields inject relativistic electrons by transporting magnetotail electrons into the outer radiation belt. In these two events, injected relativistic electrons dominated the substorm timescale enhancement of MeV electrons as observed at geosynchronous orbit.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Low-harmonic magnetosonic waves observed by the Van Allen Probes†

J. L. Posch; M. J. Engebretson; C. N. Olson; S. A. Thaller; A. Breneman; J. R. Wygant; Scott A. Boardsen; C. A. Kletzing; Charles W. Smith; G. D. Reeves

Purely compressional electromagnetic waves (fast magnetosonic waves), generated at multiple harmonics of the local proton gyrofrequency, have been observed by various types of satellite instruments (fluxgate and search coil magnetometers and electric field sensors), but most recent studies have used data from search coil sensors, and many have been restricted to high harmonics. We report here on a survey of low-harmonic waves, based on electric and magnetic field data from the Electric Fields and Waves double probe and Electric and Magnetic Field Instrument Suite and Integrated Science fluxgate magnetometer instruments, respectively, on the Van Allen Probes spacecraft during its first full precession through all local times, from 1 October 2012 to 13 July 2014. These waves were observed both inside and outside the plasmapause (PP), at L shells from 2.4 to ~6 (the spacecraft apogee), and in regions with plasma number densities ranging from 10 to >1000 cm−3. Consistent with earlier studies, wave occurrence was sharply peaked near the magnetic equator. Waves appeared at all local times but were more common from noon to dusk, and often occurred within 3 h after substorm injections. Outside the PP occurrence maximized broadly across noon, and inside the PP occurrence maximized in the dusk sector, in an extended plasmasphere. We confirm recent ray-tracing studies showing wave refraction and/or reflection at PP-like boundaries. Comparison with waveform receiver data indicates that in some cases these low-harmonic magnetosonic wave events occurred independently of higher-harmonic waves; this indicates the importance of including this population in future studies of radiation belt dynamics.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Near‐Earth injection of MeV electrons associated with intense dipolarization electric fields: Van Allen Probes observations

Lei Dai; Chi Wang; Suping Duan; Zhaohai He; J. R. Wygant; C. A. Cattell; Xin Tao; Zhenpeng Su; C. A. Kletzing; D. N. Baker; X. Li; D. M. Malaspina; J. Bernard Blake; J. F. Fennell; S. G. Claudepierre; D. L. Turner; G. D. Reeves; Herbert O. Funsten; Harlan E. Spence; V. Angelopoulos; Dennis Fruehauff; Lunjin Chen; S. A. Thaller; A. Breneman; Xiangwei Tang

Abstract Substorms generally inject tens to hundreds of keV electrons, but intense substorm electric fields have been shown to inject MeV electrons as well. An intriguing question is whether such MeVelectron injections can populate the outer radiation belt. Here we present observations of a substorm injection of MeV electrons into the inner magnetosphere. In the premidnight sector at L ∼ 5.5, Van Allen Probes (Radiation Belt Storm Probes)‐A observed a large dipolarization electric field (50 mV/m) over ∼40 s and a dispersionless injection of electrons up to ∼3 MeV. Pitch angle observations indicated betatron acceleration of MeV electrons at the dipolarization front. Corresponding signals of MeV electron injection were observed at LANL‐GEO, THEMIS‐D, and GOES at geosynchronous altitude. Through a series of dipolarizations, the injections increased the MeV electron phase space density by 1 order of magnitude in less than 3 h in the outer radiation belt (L > 4.8). Our observations provide evidence that deep injections can supply significant MeV electrons.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Van Allen Probes investigation of the large-scale duskward electric field and its role in ring current formation and plasmasphere erosion in the 1 June 2013 storm

S. A. Thaller; J. R. Wygant; Lei Dai; A. Breneman; K. Kersten; C. A. Cattell; J. W. Bonnell; J. F. Fennell; Matina Gkioulidou; C. A. Kletzing; S. De Pascuale; G. B. Hospodarsky; Scott Randolph Bounds

Using the Van Allen Probes, we investigate the enhancement in the large-scale duskward convection electric field during the geomagnetic storm (Dst similar to-120nT) on 1 June 2013 and its role in ring current ion transport and energization and plasmasphere erosion. During this storm, enhancements of similar to 1-2mV/m in the duskward electric field in the corotating frame are observed down to L shells as low as similar to 2.3. A simple model consisting of a dipole magnetic field and constant, azimuthally westward, electric field is used to calculate the earthward and westward drift of 90 degrees pitch angle ions. This model is applied to determine how far earthward ions can drift while remaining on Earths nightside, given the strength and duration of the convection electric field. The calculation based on this simple model indicates that the enhanced duskward electric field is of sufficient intensity and duration to transport ions from a range of initial locations and initial energies characteristic of (though not observed by the Van Allen Probes) the earthward edge of the plasma sheet during active times (L similar to 6-10 and similar to 1-20keV) to the observed location of the 58-267keV ion population, chosen as representative of the ring current (L similar to 3.5-5.8). According to the model calculation, this transportation should be concurrent with an energization to the range observed, similar to 58-267keV. Clear coincidence between the electric field enhancement and both plasmasphere erosion and ring current ion (58-267keV) pressure enhancements are presented. We show for the first time nearly simultaneous enhancements in the duskward convection electric field, plasmasphere erosion, and increased pressure of 58-267keV ring current ions. These 58-267keV ions have energies that are consistent with what they are expected to pick up by gradient B drifting across the electric field. These observations strongly suggest that we are observing the electric field that energizes the ions and produces the erosion of the plasmasphere.

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J. R. Wygant

University of Minnesota

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A. Breneman

University of Minnesota

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G. D. Reeves

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Harlan E. Spence

University of New Hampshire

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Lei Dai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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J. F. Fennell

The Aerospace Corporation

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D. L. Turner

The Aerospace Corporation

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