Electrostatic solitary waves in the Earth's bow shock: nature, properties, lifetimes and origin
R. Wang, I. Y. Vasko, F. S. Mozer, S. D. Bale, I. V. Kuzichev, A. V., Artemyev, and MMS Team

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of bipolar electrostatic solitary waves in Earth's bow shock, revealing their properties, origins, and behaviors with implications for plasma physics.
Contribution
It introduces a correction procedure for measurements and offers new insights into the scale, polarity, propagation, and origin of ESW in Earth's bow shock.
Findings
Over 95% of ESW are of negative polarity.
ESW have spatial scales of 10-100 m, below a few volts in amplitude.
Most ESW propagate within 30° of the shock plane and are linked to ion phase space holes.
Abstract
We present a statistical analysis of more than two thousand bipolar electrostatic solitary waves (ESW) collected from ten quasi-perpendicular Earth's bow shock crossings by Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft. We developed and implemented a correction procedure for reconstruction of actual electric fields, velocities, and other properties of ESW from measurements, whose spatial scales are typically comparable with or smaller than spatial distance between voltage-sensitive probes. We determined the optimal ratio between frequency response factors of axial and spin plane antennas to be around 1.65/1.8. We found that more than 95\% of the ESW in the Earth's bow shock are of negative polarity and present an in depth analysis of properties of these ESW. They have spatial scales of about 10--100 m that is within a range of to , amplitudes typically below a few…
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