· Latest News
Minghui Zhu's article is selected as EPP cover
Congratulations to PhD student Ms. Minghui Zhu for publishing in Earth and Planetary Physics. The article is selected as the journal cover.
Congratulations!
Congratulations, Dr. Zhu!
On May 22, 2022, Ms. Minghui Zhu successfully defended her PhD thesis: "Study on the Excitation of the Electromagnetic Ion Cyclotron (EMIC) Wave in the Inner Magnetosphere and Its Interaction with Ions".
Congratulations! Dr. Zhu!
Graduate student Hongtao Huang published in JGR
Congratulations to former PhD student Mr. Hongtao Huang for getting his paper published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics.
Graduate student Kun Bai published in ApJ
Congratulations to PhD student Ms. Kun Bai for getting her second paper published in The Astrophysical Journal.
Graduate student Xingbin Tian published in JGR
Congratulations to PhD student Mr. Xingbin Tian for getting his second paper published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics.
Graduate student Fan Gong published in GRL
Congratulations to PhD student Mr. Fan Gong for getting his first paper published in Geophysical Research Letter (GRL).
Graduate student Kun Bai published in ApJ
Congratulations to PhD student Ms. Kun Bai for getting her first paper published in The Astrophysical Journal (ApJ).
Congratulations, Dr. Hongtao Huang!
On December 9, 2021, Hongtao Huang successfully defended his PhD thesis: "Simulations of Wave Activities and Particle Dynamics in Collisionless Magnetic Reconnection".
Congratulations! Dr. Huang!
Graduate student Minghui Zhu published in JASTP
Congratulations to my PhD student Ms. Minghui Zhu, for getting her second paper published in the Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics.
Postdoc Shreedevi PR published in JGR
Congratulations to my former Postdoc Research Associate Ms. Shreedevi PR, for publishing her recent work in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Space Physics.
Graduate student Minghui Zhu published in JGR
Congratulations to my PhD student Ms. Minghui Zhu, for getting her first paper published in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Space Physics.
Graduate student Hongtao Huang published in EPP
Congratulations to my PhD student Mr. Hongtao Huang, for his recent publication in the journal of Earth and Planetary Physics (EPP).
Dong Wei successfully defended his PhD thesis
On August 8, 2020, Dong Wei successfully defended his PhD thesis: "Study on the coupling of mid- and high-latitude ionosphere and magnetosphere".
Congratulations! Dr. Wei!
8/2020
Postdoc Shreedevi PR was awarded an NSFC grant
Shreedevi PR, a postdoc in our research team, was awarded the "Research Fund for International Young Scientist" by the NSFC. Congratulations!
The project is "Onset and characteristics of Sub Auroral Polarization Streams (SAPS) during COronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) and Corotating Interaction Regions (CIRs) during geomagnetic storms".
08/2019
Graduate Student Dong Wei published GRL paper
PhD student Dong Wei recently published a GRL paper on "The Magnetospheric Driving Source of Double-Peak Subauroral Ion Drifts: Double Ring Current Pressure Peaks". Congratulations!
Double-peak subauroral ion drifts (DSAIDs), characterized by two high-speed flow channels, is a newly identified flow structure in the subauroral ionosphere. He et al. (2016, https://doi.org/10.1002/2016GL069133) proposed that two region 2 field-aligned currents (R2 FACs) might cause the DSAIDs. However, the underlying physical process that drives the double R2 FACs is unknown. This study reports a DSAIDs event and reveals its magnetospheric drivers. Defense Meteorological Satellite Program F18 satellite observed DSAIDs in the duskside subauroral region, which corresponded well to two low-density troughs and two R2 FACs. The Van Allen Probe B demonstrated that intense substorm ion injections recurrently occurred prior to the formation of DSAIDs, suggesting a potential magnetospheric driver of DSAIDs. Simulation confirms that recurrent ion injections intensify the partial ring current and create double pressure peaks in the near-Earth dusk-to-midnight region, leading two R2 FACs to flow into the ionosphere. The two R2 FACs are thus responsible for the DSAIDs formation. This study unveils the generation mechanism of DSAIDs and deepens the knowledge of the complex magnetosphere-ionosphere system.
7/2019
Yu's study is selected as a cover of Space Weather
Yu's recent study on "Initial Results From the GEM Challenge on the Spacecraft Surface Charging Environment" was selected by the Journal of Space Weather as a cover image. It is also reported as a Science Highlight on the home page of Los Alamos National Laboratry, where Yu worked before and collaborated with the team for this study.