Commission H (Waves in Plasmas) Activity
Report
March 10th, 2004
T. Okada, Y. Omura, and H. Matsumoto
1. Research Project
(R-1) Geospace Plasma Waves
AKEBONO (EXOS-D) satellite has been making observations since1989. The plasma wave data obtained by the instruments PWS and VLF are available on request [for further information: http://www.stp.isas.jaxa.jp/akebono].
GEOTAIL spacecraft has been operated since 1992. Recently, it experienced the big solar flares in October-November, 2003 and provided the data on the wave phenomena and solar-terrestrial environment. The Plasma Wave Instrument (PWI) is continuously collecting spectrum data and high time-resolution waveform data. It is expected to be in a good condition at least until the next long eclipse in 2004.The 24 hour plots of the observed wave spectrum data are opened in the PWI web site http://www.kurasc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/gtlpwi, http://www.stp.isas.jaxa.jp/geotail.
Ground observations at Syowa Station,
(R-2) Planetary Plasma Wave Experiments
NOZOMI made the final Mars swing-by on December 14, 2003 and became an artificial planet. No plasma wave observation was carried out in the NOZOMI mission. The NOZOMI web site is http://www.planet-b.isas.ac.jp/index-e.html. The information of the failure is http://www.isas.ac.jp/e/snews/2003/1209.shtml.
SELENE spacecraft will be launched in 2006. The functions of the wave instruments have been examined including the EMC system test. The Lunar Radar Sounder (LRS) experiment will provide subsurface stratification and tectonic features of the lunar crust by using an FM/CW radar technique in HF frequency range. LRS will measure the spectrum of the solar and planetary radio waves in the range from 10 Hz to 30 MHz. The Wave Form Capture (WFC) will observe the solar and lunar plasma waves in the frequencies from 100 Hz to 1MHz by using a digital sweep frequency and a waveform receiver.
(R-3) Ionospheric Radio Waves
S-310-33 rocket experiment was conducted at Kagoshima Space center,
JAXA on January 18th, 2004 in order to measure the profiles of electron density
and collision frequency in the lower ionosphere. The propagation characteristics
in the ionosphere of the MF wave (NHK Kumamoto Broadcasting Station; 873 kHz)
and the DC probe data are used for analysis. This experiment is important to
improve the International Reference Ionosphere (IRI) model at altitudes below 75
km. For the same aim, a rocket experiment at high latitudes is now under design
by the Alaska Student Rocket Project (ASRP) team. The rocket named as SRP-5 will
be launched in
(R-4) Space Solar Power System
Space Solar Power System (SSPS) will provide a clean and limitless energy resource from space by microwave power transmission (MPT). The SSPS studies, carried out in the latter half of 1970's under the sponsorship of the US NASA/DOE, contained research on the effects associated with the propagation of intense microwave beams through the ionosphere. Two rocket experiments of MPT in space and some computer experiments are carried out in Japan in 1980's and in 1990's. Japanese SSPS committees in JAXA and USEF now focus on design of MPT experimental satellite and its purpose contains experiments of measurement of interaction between microwaves and ionospheric plasmas.
(R-5) Solar-Terrestrial Environment Simulator and Data Base
For integrated studies of STP (Solar Terrestrial Physics), a database system that provides with the environment for data access, plot, analysis, and user communication has been developed. It has been extended and applied on 4-D (3-D in space and 1-D in time) virtual reality system. The network database system can be downloaded on the web https://dl.infonet.cs.ehime-u.ac.jp/download/space_index_e.aspx.
In order to make quantitative evaluation of electromagnetic environment around spacecraft, three dimensional electromagnetic particle simulations are being performed using 125 nodes (2 TB Memory) of the Earth Simulator System, reproducing various physical processes induced by emission of heavy ions in electric propulsion.
2. Conferences
2.1
Conferences and Meetings (November 2003 – March 2004)
1)
Symposium on Super DARN network, NIPR, Tokyo,
December 19, 2003
2)
AGU 2003 Fall Meeting, San Francisco U.S.A.,
December 8-12, 2003
3)
3/17-3/19 Kyoto Japan International Workshop
"Explosive Phenomena in
Magnetized Plasmas -New
Development in Reconnection Research-"
2.2 Future Conferences and
Meetings
1)
First EGU General Assembly, Nice, France
April 25-30,2004
2)
Joint AGU-Canadian Geophysical
Union (CGU) Meeting, Montrial Canada, May 17-21, 2004.
3)
The First Asia-Oceania
Geophysics Society Meeting , Singapore, July 5-9, 2004.
4)
35th COSPAR Scientific Assembly, Paris,
France, July 8-25, 2004.
5)
NATO Advanced Study Institute on Sprites,
Elves and Intense Lightning Discharges Corte in Corsica, July 21-30,
2004.
6)
Western Pacific Geophysics Meeting : Honolulu
Hawaii, August 16-20, 2004
7)
AP-RASC'04, Qingdao, China, August 24-27,
2004.