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Dive into the research topics where Shotaro Sakai is active.

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Featured researches published by Shotaro Sakai.


Science | 2015

MAVEN observations of the response of Mars to an interplanetary coronal mass ejection

Bruce M. Jakosky; Joseph M. Grebowsky; J. G. Luhmann; J. E. P. Connerney; F. G. Eparvier; R. E. Ergun; J. S. Halekas; D. Larson; P. Mahaffy; J. P. McFadden; D. F. Mitchell; Nicholas M. Schneider; Richard W. Zurek; S. W. Bougher; D. A. Brain; Y. J. Ma; C. Mazelle; L. Andersson; D. J. Andrews; D. Baird; D. N. Baker; J. M. Bell; Mehdi Benna; M. S. Chaffin; Phillip C. Chamberlin; Y.-Y. Chaufray; John Clarke; Glyn Collinson; Michael R. Combi; Frank Judson Crary

Coupling between the lower and upper atmosphere, combined with loss of gas from the upper atmosphere to space, likely contributed to the thin, cold, dry atmosphere of modern Mars. To help understand ongoing ion loss to space, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) spacecraft made comprehensive measurements of the Mars upper atmosphere, ionosphere, and interactions with the Sun and solar wind during an interplanetary coronal mass ejection impact in March 2015. Responses include changes in the bow shock and magnetosheath, formation of widespread diffuse aurora, and enhancement of pick-up ions. Observations and models both show an enhancement in escape rate of ions to space during the event. Ion loss during solar events early in Mars history may have been a major contributor to the long-term evolution of the Mars atmosphere.


Science | 2015

Early MAVEN Deep Dip campaign reveals thermosphere and ionosphere variability

S. W. Bougher; Bruce M. Jakosky; J. S. Halekas; Joseph M. Grebowsky; J. G. Luhmann; P. Mahaffy; J. E. P. Connerney; F. G. Eparvier; R. E. Ergun; D. Larson; J. P. McFadden; D. L. Mitchell; Nicholas M. Schneider; Richard W. Zurek; C. Mazelle; L. Andersson; D. J. Andrews; D. Baird; D. N. Baker; J. M. Bell; Mehdi Benna; D. A. Brain; M. S. Chaffin; Phillip C. Chamberlin; Y.-Y. Chaufray; John Clarke; Glyn Collinson; Michael R. Combi; Frank Judson Crary; T. E. Cravens

The Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission, during the second of its Deep Dip campaigns, made comprehensive measurements of martian thermosphere and ionosphere composition, structure, and variability at altitudes down to ~130 kilometers in the subsolar region. This altitude range contains the diffusively separated upper atmosphere just above the well-mixed atmosphere, the layer of peak extreme ultraviolet heating and primary reservoir for atmospheric escape. In situ measurements of the upper atmosphere reveal previously unmeasured populations of neutral and charged particles, the homopause altitude at approximately 130 kilometers, and an unexpected level of variability both on an orbit-to-orbit basis and within individual orbits. These observations help constrain volatile escape processes controlled by thermosphere and ionosphere structure and variability.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2001

Micro‐tsunami from a local interplate earthquake detected by cabled offshore tsunami observation in northeastern Japan

Ryota Hino; Yuichiro Tanioka; Toshihiko Kanazawa; Shotaro Sakai; Minoru Nishino; Kiyoshi Suyehiro

A micro tsunami from an interplate earthquake (Mw 6.1) was observed in 1998 on ocean bottom tsunami meters (OBTMs) deployed east off the northeastern Japan. The offshore tsunami data without complex distortions due to the coastal topography enable us to estimate reliable tsunami source parameters. The observed amplitude was about 1.5 cm at epicentral distance less than 100 km. We numerically computed the tsunami waveform by solving the linear Boussinesq equations. The observed tsunami waveforms are well explained by synthetic waveforms assuming the fault width of 10–15 km. The depth of the fault is estimated as 5–10 km below the seafloor, which is in good agreement with the location of the plate boundary defined by previous seismic studies.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Model insights into energetic photoelectrons measured at Mars by MAVEN

Shotaro Sakai; A. Rahmati; David L. Mitchell; T. E. Cravens; Stephen W. Bougher; Christian Mazelle; W. K. Peterson; Francis G. Eparvier; Juan M. Fontenla; Bruce M. Jakosky

Photoelectrons are important for heating, ionization, and airglow production in planetary atmospheres. Measured electron fluxes provide insight into the sources and sinks of energy in the Martian upper atmosphere. The Solar Wind Electron Analyzer instrument on board the MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN) spacecraft measured photoelectrons including Auger electrons with 500 eV energies. A two-stream electron transport code was used to interpret the observations, including Auger electrons associated with K shell ionization of carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen. It explains the processes that control the photoelectron spectrum, such as the solar irradiance at different wavelengths, external electron fluxes from the Martian magnetosheath or tail, and the structure of the upper atmosphere (e.g., the thermal electron density). Our understanding of the complex processes related to the conversion of solar irradiances to thermal energy in the Martian ionosphere will be advanced by model comparisons with measurements of suprathermal electrons by MAVEN.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Photoelectrons and solar ionizing radiation at Mars: Predictions versus MAVEN observations

W. K. Peterson; E. M. B. Thiemann; Francis G. Eparvier; L. Andersson; C. M. Fowler; D. Larson; D. L. Mitchell; Christian Mazelle; Juan M. Fontenla; J. Scott Evans; Shaosui Xu; Michael W. Liemohn; Stephen W. Bougher; Shotaro Sakai; T. E. Cravens; Meredith Elrod; Mehdi Benna; P. Mahaffy; Bruce M. Jakosky

Understanding the evolution of the Martian atmosphere requires knowledge of processes transforming solar irradiance into thermal energy well enough to model them accurately. Here we compare Martian photoelectron energy spectra measured at periapsis by Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution MissioN (MAVEN) with calculations made using three photoelectron production codes and three solar irradiance models as well as modeled and measured CO2 densities. We restricted our comparisons to regions where the contribution from solar wind electrons and ions were negligible. The two intervals examined on 19 October 2014 have different observed incident solar irradiance spectra. In spite of the differences in photoionization cross sections and irradiance spectra used, we find the agreement between models to be within the combined uncertainties associated with the observations from the MAVEN neutral density, electron flux, and solar irradiance instruments.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Hot oxygen escape from Mars: Simple scaling with solar EUV irradiance

T. E. Cravens; A. Rahmati; Jane L. Fox; Robert J. Lillis; S. W. Bougher; J. G. Luhmann; Shotaro Sakai; Justin Deighan; Yuni Lee; Michael R. Combi; Bruce M. Jakosky

The evolution of the atmosphere of Mars and the loss of volatiles over the lifetime of the solar system is a key topic in planetary science. An important loss process for atomic species, such as oxygen, is ionospheric photochemical escape. Dissociative recombination of O2+ ions (the major ion species) produces fast oxygen atoms, some of which can escape from the planet. Many theoretical hot O models have been constructed over the years, although a number of uncertainties are present in these models, particularly concerning the elastic cross sections of O atoms with CO2. Recently, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission has been rapidly improving our understanding of the upper atmosphere and ionosphere of Mars and its interaction with the external environment (e.g., solar wind), allowing a new assessment of this important loss process. The purpose of the current paper is to take a simple analytical approach to the oxygen escape problem in order to (1) study the role that variations in solar radiation or solar wind fluxes could have on escape in a transparent fashion and (2) isolate the effects of uncertainties in oxygen cross sections on the derived oxygen escape rates. In agreement with several more elaborate numerical models, we find that the escape flux is directly proportional to the incident solar extreme ultraviolet irradiance and is inversely proportional to the backscatter elastic cross section. The amount of O lost due to ion transport in the topside ionosphere is found to be about 5–10% of the total.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Electron energetics in the Martian dayside ionosphere: Model comparisons with MAVEN data

Shotaro Sakai; L. Andersson; T. E. Cravens; David L. Mitchell; Christian Mazelle; A. Rahmati; C. M. Fowler; Stephen W. Bougher; E. M. B. Thiemann; Francis G. Eparvier; Juan M. Fontenla; Paul R. Mahaffy; J. E. P. Connerney; Bruce M. Jakosky

This paper presents a study of the energetics of the dayside ionosphere of Mars using models and data from several instruments onboard the MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN) spacecraft. In particular, calculated photoelectron fluxes are compared with suprathermal electron fluxes measured by the Solar Wind Electron Analyzer (SWEA), and calculated electron temperatures are compared with temperatures measured by the Langmuir Probe and Waves (LPW) experiment. The major heat source for the thermal electrons is Coulomb heating from the suprathermal electron population, and cooling due to collisional rotational and vibrational CO2 dominates the energy loss. The models used in this study were largely able to reproduce the observed high topside ionosphere electron temperatures (e.g., 3000 K at 300 km altitude) without using a topside heat flux when magnetic field topologies consistent with the measured magnetic field were adopted. Magnetic topology affects both suprathermal electron transport and thermal electron heat conduction. The effects of using two different solar irradiance models were also investigated. In particular, photoelectron fluxes and electron temperatures found using the HESSR (Heliospheric Environment Solar Spectrum Radiation) irradiance were higher than those with the FISM-M (Flare Irradiance Spectrum Model - Mars). The electron temperature is shown to affect the O2+ dissociative recombination rate coefficient, which in turn affects photochemical escape of oxygen from Mars.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Seismic Wavefield Imaging of Long-Period Ground Motion in the Tokyo Metropolitan Area, Japan

Masayuki Kano; Hiromichi Nagao; K. Nagata; Shin-ichi Ito; Shotaro Sakai; Shigeki Nakagawa; Muneo Hori; Naoshi Hirata

Long-period ground motions due to large earthquakes can cause devastating disasters, especially in urbanized areas located on sedimentary basins. To assess and mitigate such damage, it is essential to rapidly evaluate seismic hazards for infrastructures, which can be simulated by seismic response analyses that use waveforms at the base of each infrastructure as an input ground motion. The present study reconstructs the seismic wavefield in the Tokyo metropolitan area located on the Kanto sedimentary basin, Japan, from seismograms of the Metropolitan Seismic Observation network (MeSO-net). The obtained wavefield fully explains the observed waveforms in the frequency band of 0.10–0.20 Hz. This is attributed to the seismic wavefield imaging technique proposed by Kano et al. [2017], which implements the replica exchange Monte Carlo method to simultaneously estimate model parameters related to the subsurface structure and source information. Further investigation shows that the reconstructed seismic wavefield lower than 0.30 Hz is of high quality in terms of variance reduction, which quantifies a misfit in waveforms, but that the variance reduction rapidly worsens in higher frequencies. Meanwhile, the velocity response spectra show good agreement with observations up to 0.90 Hz in terms of the combined goodness-of-fit, which is a measure of misfit in the velocity response spectra. Inputting the reconstructed wavefield into seismic response analyses, we can rapidly assess the overall damage to infrastructures immediately after a large earthquake.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Modulations of aerosol impacts on cloud microphysics induced by the warm Kuroshio Current under the East Asian winter monsoon

M. Koike; Naruhiko Asano; Hisashi Nakamura; Shotaro Sakai; T. M. Nagao; Takashi Y. Nakajima

In our previous aircraft observations, the possible influence of high sea surface temperature (SST) along the Kuroshio Current on aerosol-cloud interactions over the western North Pacific was revealed. The cloud droplet number concentration (Nc) was found to increase with decreasing near-surface static stability (NSS), which was evaluated locally as the difference between the SST and surface air temperature (SAT). To explore the spatial and temporal extent to which this warm SST influence can be operative, the present study analyzed Nc values estimated from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite measurements. The comparison of the local Nc values between the high and low SST – SAT days revealed a marked increase in Nc (up to a factor of 1.8) along the Kuroshio Current in the southern East China Sea, where particularly high SST – SAT values (up to 8 K) were observed in winter under monsoonal cold air outflows from the Asian Continent. This cold airflow destabilizes the atmospheric boundary layer, which leads to enhanced updraft velocities within the well-developed mixed layer and thus greater Nc. The monsoonal northwesterlies also bring a large amount of anthropogenic aerosols from the Asian continent that increase Nc in the first place. These results suggest that the same modulations of cloud microphysics can occur over other warm western boundary currents, including the Gulf Stream, under polluted cool continental airflows. Possibilities of influencing the cloud liquid water path (CLWP) are also discussed.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Electron density inside Enceladus plume inferred from plasma oscillations excited by dust impacts

S.-Y. Ye; D. A. Gurnett; W. S. Kurth; T. F. Averkamp; M. Morooka; Shotaro Sakai; Jan-Erik Wahlund

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Bruce M. Jakosky

University of Colorado Boulder

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A. Rahmati

University of California

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Juan M. Fontenla

University of Colorado Boulder

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L. Andersson

University of Colorado Boulder

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Francis G. Eparvier

University of Colorado Boulder

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