SLIM Project Team

三谷 烈史

ミタニ タケフミ  (Takefumi MITANI)

基本情報

所属
国立研究開発法人宇宙航空研究開発機構 宇宙科学研究所 太陽系科学研究系 助教
学位
修士(理学)(東京大学)
博士(理学)(東京大学)

J-GLOBAL ID
201901006861784502
researchmap会員ID
B000359529

論文

 100
  • Emile Saint‐Girons, Didier Mourenas, Anton V. Artemyev, Vassilis Angelopoulos, S. Kasahara, Y. Miyoshi, A. Matsuoka, T. Mitani, S. Yokota, T. Hori, K. Keika, T. Takashima, M. Teramoto, I. Shinohara, K. Yamamoto, Y. Kasahara, F. Tsuchiya, A. Kumamoto, A. Shinbori
    Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 2026年4月  
  • Maximilien Berthet, Yusuke Maru, Yoshifumi Saito, Takefumi Mitani, Iku Shinohara, Kazushi Asamura
    Acta Astronautica 2026年4月  
  • L. Olifer, D. Zhou, M. Patel, I. R. Mann, M. K. Hudson, A. W. Degeling, C. O. Heinke, G. R. Sivakoff, A. Kale, S. Kasahara, S. Yokota, K. Keika, T. Hori, T. Mitani, T. Takashima, Y. Kasahara, S. Matsuda, A. Shinbori, A. Matsuoka, M. Teramoto, K. Yamamoto, I. Shinohara, Y. Miyoshi
    Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 131(4) 2026年3月28日  
    Abstract The May 2024 geomagnetic superstorm provided the opportunity to explore how strong wave‐particle interactions affect energetic electron precipitation under intense driving. Using coordinated measurements from a balloon‐borne Timepix‐based X‐ray detector, ground‐based riometers and magnetometers, and Arase satellite observations, we identified quasi‐periodic bursts of energetic electron precipitation coincident with Pc5 ultra low frequency (ULF) wave oscillations. Arase satellite data revealed energy‐dispersed trapped energetic electron flux modulations in the “seed” energy range, indicating that trapped electron flux was likely modulated by ULF waves. This letter reveals that these flux enhancements surpassed the Kennel‐Petschek (K‐P) limit, creating intense chorus waves and driving periodic electron precipitation. Drift‐dispersion analysis traced these modulations back to a source in the post‐noon magnetospheric sector, matching balloon and ground‐based measurements. Here, we propose a novel indirect ULF wave‐driven mechanism for modulated energetic electron precipitation, whereby periodic modulations of “seed” electron fluxes enhance electron losses.
  • Man Hua, Xiaofei Shi, Jacob Bortnik, Anton Artemyev, Vassilis Angelopoulos, Yoshizumi Miyoshi, Takefumi Mitani, James L. Burch, Takeshi Takashima, Tomoaki Hori, Ayako Matsuoka, Mariko Teramoto, Kazuhiro Yamamoto, Yoshiya Kasahara, Fuminori Tsuchiya, Atsushi Kumamoto, Atsuki Shinbori, Iku Shinohara
    Geophysical Research Letters 2026年2月16日  
  • Zheng Xiang, Xinlin Li, Daniel N. Baker, Qianli Ma, Yang Mei, Declan O’Brien, Hong Zhao, David Brennan, Theodore Sarris, Yoshizumi Miyoshi, Yoshiya Kasahara, Takefumi Mitani, Takeshi Takashima, Michael A. Temerin
    AGU Advances 7(1) 2026年1月14日  査読有り
    Abstract Energetic electron precipitation plays a pivotal role in shaping Earth's radiation belt dynamics and drives significant physical and chemical changes in the upper atmosphere. However, the detailed mechanisms governing the loss of relativistic electrons have remained unclear, largely due to the limited energy coverage and coarse resolution of previous measurements. Here we report high‐resolution observations of bursty electron precipitation across a broad energy range (0.3–2.3 MeV), obtained by the Relativistic Electron and Proton Telescope integrated little experiment‐2 (REPTile‐2) onboard the Colorado Inner Radiation Belt Experiment (CIRBE) CubeSat. REPTile‐2 employs a novel instrument design that minimizes background to enable clean spectral measurements with the highest energy resolution achieved to date in low‐Earth orbit for this energy range. During the conjunction events when CIRBE was close to the same field line with Arase satellite at higher altitudes, our analysis shows that pitch angle diffusion driven by chorus waves can fully account for the observed three bursty precipitation events over the entire energy range. These results provide the definitive evidence for a unified chorus‐driven electron loss process acting across a wide energy range and underscore the critical importance of high‐resolution measurements in resolving long‐standing uncertainties in radiation belt dynamics. Furthermore, they offer new insight into the energy‐dependent atmospheric impacts of electron precipitation, with broad implications for space weather forecasting and upper atmospheric chemistry.

MISC

 147

共同研究・競争的資金等の研究課題

 8