Bursty bulk flows (BBFs) are high-speed plasma flow events, observed in Earth's magnetotail (Angelopoulos et al., 1992;Baumjohann et al., 1990). They are believed to be generated by magnetic reconnection in the tail at distances greater than about ∼20-30 Earth radii (Re) (Chen & Wolf, 1993). Earthward BBFs observed in the plasma sheet within a wide range of geocentric distances from 5 to 30 Re are characterized by dipolarization (an increase in the B z magnetic field component) and a decrease in plasma density and plasma pressure (Ohtani et al., 2004). BBFs are spatially localized in the direction of the flow and are often confined to <3 Re in the dawn-dusk direction (Angelopoulos et al., 1997). Due to their localization, these events are most often observed as bursts ∼10 min duration. Between 10 and 20 Re their speeds reach several hundred to over a thousand km/s in earthward direction. As BBFs move closer to Earth (6-12 Re tailward), they slow down and deflect as their energy dissipates (Shiokawa et al., 1997). The region over which the flow is slowed and diverted in the near-Earth tail is known as the BBF braking region.The flow braking can generate turbulent plasma fluctuations and instabilities (e.g., El-Alaoui et al., 2013;Shiokawa et al., 2005). These fluctuations can exhibit properties of MHD-and kinetic scale Alfvén waves being involved in a turbulent cascade in BBFs (Chaston et al., 2012(Chaston et al., , 2014Stawarz et al., 2015). The energy cascade has also been found associated with tail reconnection (Dai et al., 2011;Ergun et al., 2020) and observed in the plasma sheet boundary layer between 4 and 6 Re (Wygant et al., 2002). Ergun et al. (2015) found that BBF braking events can be accompanied by high-amplitude electric fields (>50 mV/m). The large-amplitude electric fields have been observed at radial distances between 10 and 13 Re