Van Allen Probes EMFISIS Waves
Chorus from 2013-03-21

Van Allen Probes chorus from 2013-03-21 00:49UT
click to play audio Play audio (30 seconds)
AVI animation with moving cursor

The Van Allen Probes EMFISIS Waves instruments detected these signals with three orthogonal magnetic antennas (Bu, Bv, Bw) during UTC hour 00 of March 21, 2013. We see even more variety in these chorus emissions with their intensity rising and falling every few seconds in a periodic way. This is a phenomenon which has been noticed in the past but our understanding of why this happens is not yet complete.

Chorus waves in Earth's magnetosphere are generated in the Van Allen radiation belts by electrons spiraling along Earth's magnetic field lines in this region. Once generated, the chorus waves interact with the moving electrons, either accelerating them to higher energies or disturbing the spiral orbit of the electrons and causing them to fall into Earth's upper atmosphere along the magnetic field lines.

The animation shows a frequency-time spectrogram of the data with a moving cursor that indicates the time position of the audio track.

Earth Chorus


Return to Van Allen Probes audio showcase page
Return to Van Allen Probes EMFISIS Waves page


© The University of Iowa 2006 - 2013. All rights reserved.
Contact information. Send questions or comments to William Kurth.
The Radio and Plasma Wave Group, Department of Physics & Astronomy, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences.
Valid HTML 4.01!