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Abstract Cross‐scale energy transfer is a fundamental problem in plasma physics but is poorly understood. Based on Magnetospheric Multiscale satellite (MMS) data, we present the evidence of the energy transfer between ion‐scale and electron‐scale waves in the Earth's foreshock region. Low‐frequency fast‐magnetosonic waves (LFWs, ∼0.2 Hz; ion‐gyration scales) are observed in the solar wind upstream of the Earth's bow shock. Due to the magnetic compression of LFWs, suprathermal electrons (∼10–100s eV) are adiabatically heated in the perpendicular direction, which leads to the high anisotropy in the high‐magnetic‐field region. Then high‐frequency whistler mode waves (HFWs, 0.1–0.5 f ce ; electron‐gyration scales) are excited by those anisotropic electrons through cyclotron resonance. Therefore, this study reveals how energy is transported from LFWs to HFWs, suggesting that wave‐particle interactions have played a key role in cross‐scale energy transfer in collisionless plasmas.
Chen et al. (Mon,) studied this question.