318 research outputs found
Simulation of January 1-7, 1978 events
The solar wind disturbances of January 1 to 7, 1978 are reconstructed by a modeling method. First, the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) background pattern, including a corotating shock, is reproduced using the Stanford source surface map. Then, two solar flares with their onset times on January 1, 0717 UT at S17 deg E10 deg and 2147 UT S17 deg E32 deg, respectively, are selected to generate two interplanetary transient shocks. It is shown that these two shocks interacted with the corotating shock, resulting in a series of interplanetary events observed by four spacecraft, Helios 1 and 2, IMP-8 (Interplanetary Monitoring Platform 8), and Voyager 2. Results show that these three shock waves interact and coalesce in interplanetary space such that Helios 2 and Voyager 2 observed only one shock and Helios 1 and IMP-8 observed two shocks. All shocks observed by the four spacecraft, except the corotating shock at Helios 1, are either a transient shock or a shock which is formed from coalescing of the transient shocks with the corotating shock. The method is useful in reconstructing a very complicated chain of interplanetary events observed by a number of spacecraft
A simulation study of two major events in the heliosphere during the present sunspot cycle
The two major disturbances in the heliosphere during the present sunspot cycle, the event of June to August, 1982, and the event of April to June, 1978, are simulated by the method developed by Hakamada and Akasofu (1982). Specifically, an attempt was made to simulate the effects of six major flares from three active regions in June and July, 1982, and April and May, 1978. A comparison of the results with the solar wind observations at Pioneer 12 (approximately 0.8 au), ISEE-3 (approximately 1 au), Pioneer 11 (approximately 7 to 13 au) and Pioneer 10 (approximately 16 to 28 au) suggests that some major flares occurred behind the disk of the sun during the two periods. The method provides qualitatively some information as to how such a series of intense solar flares can greatly disturb both the inner and outer heliospheres. A long lasting effect on cosmic rays is discussed in conjunction with the disturbed heliosphere
A study of omega bands and Ps6 pulsations on the ground, at low altitude and at geostationary orbit
We investigate the electrodynamic coupling between auroral omega bands and the inner magnetosphere. The goal of this study is to determine the features to which omega bands map in the magnetosphere. To establish the auroral-magnetosphere connection, we appeal to the case study analysis of the data rich event of September 26, 1989. At 6 magnetic local time (MLT), two trains of Ps6 pulsations (ground magnetic signatures of omega bands) were observed to drift over the Canadian Auroral Network For the OPEN Program Unified Study (CANOPUS) chain. At the same time periodic ionospheric flow patterns moved through the collocated Bistatic Auroral Radar System (BARS) field of view. Similar coincident magnetic variations were observed by GOES 6, GOES 7 and SCATHA, all of which had magnetic foot points near the CANOPUS/BARS stations. SCATHA, which was located at 6 MLT, 0.5 RE earthward of GOES 7 observed the 10 min period pulsations, whereas GOES 7 did not. In addition, DMSP F6 and F8 were over-flying the region and observed characteristic precipitation and flow signatures. From this fortunate constellation of ground and space observations, we conclude that auroral omega bands are the electrodynamic signature of a corrugated current sheet (or some similar spatially localized magnetic structure) in the near-Earth geostationary magnetosphere
Incoherent-Scatter Radar Observations of Westward Electric Fields, 2
In this paper we describe the results of a series of geomagnetic meridian plane radar incoherent scatter plasma transport measurements. From such data the eastward (zonal) component of the electric field can be deduced. The results show that the electric field has an eastward component whenever the discrete auroras are northward of the region of the measurement. The zonal field component turns westward as the discrete auroras move equatorward of the region of the measurement. Thus there is an eastward electric field boundary near the equatorward limit of the discrete aurora, which is the poleward boundary of the diffuse aurora during undisturbed periods. During a particularly disturbed period we also observed three pronounced substorm-related enhancements of the westward-directed zonal field. For midnight and morning sector substorms the enhancements preceded the substorm onset times by 20-30 min. We show from meridian chain all-sky camera data that all three enhancements coincided with equatorward expansions of the auroral oval
Hall magnetohydrodynamics of partially ionized plasmas
The Hall effect arises in a plasma when electrons are able to drift with the
magnetic field but ions cannot. In a fully-ionized plasma this occurs for
frequencies between the ion and electron cyclotron frequencies because of the
larger ion inertia. Typically this frequency range lies well above the
frequencies of interest (such as the dynamical frequency of the system under
consideration) and can be ignored. In a weakly-ionized medium, however, the
Hall effect arises through a different mechanism -- neutral collisions
preferentially decouple ions from the magnetic field. This typically occurs at
much lower frequencies and the Hall effect may play an important role in the
dynamics of weakly-ionised systems such as the Earth's ionosphere and
protoplanetary discs.
To clarify the relationship between these mechanisms we develop an
approximate single-fluid description of a partially ionized plasma that becomes
exact in the fully-ionized and weakly-ionized limits. Our treatment includes
the effects of ohmic, ambipolar, and Hall diffusion. We show that the Hall
effect is relevant to the dynamics of a partially ionized medium when the
dynamical frequency exceeds the ratio of ion to bulk mass density times the
ion-cyclotron frequency, i.e. the Hall frequency. The corresponding length
scale is inversely proportional to the ion to bulk mass density ratio as well
as to the ion-Hall beta parameter.Comment: 11 page, 1 figure, typos removed, numbers in tables revised; accepted
for publication in MNRA
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Statistical azimuthal structuring of the substorm onset arc: implications for the onset mechanism
The onset of an auroral substorm is generally thought to occur on a quiet, homogeneous auroral arc. We present a statistical study of independently-selected substorm onset arcs and find that over 90% of the arcs studied have resolvable characteristic spatial scales in the form of auroral beads. We find that the vast majority (~88%) of auroral beads have small amplitudes relative to the background, making them invisible without quantitative analysis. This confirms that auroral beads are highly likely to be ubiquitous to all onset arcs, rather than a special case phenomena as previously thought. Moreover, as these auroral beads grow exponentially through onset, we conclude that a magnetospheric plasma instability is fundamental to substorm onset itself
Recovery phase of magnetic storms induced by different interplanetary drivers
Statistical analysis of Dst behaviour during recovery phase of magnetic
storms induced by different types of interplanetary drivers is made on the
basis of OMNI data in period 1976-2000. We study storms induced by ICMEs
(including magnetic clouds (MC) and Ejecta) and both types of compressed
regions: corotating interaction regions (CIR) and Sheaths. The shortest,
moderate and longest durations of recovery phase are observed in ICME-, CIR-,
and Sheath-induced storms, respectively. Recovery phases of strong ( nT) magnetic storms are well approximated by hyperbolic functions
with constant times for all types of drivers
while for moderate ( nT) storms profile can not
be approximated by hyperbolic function with constant because
hyperbolic time increases with increasing time of recovery phase.
Relation between duration and value for storms induced by ICME and
Sheath has 2 parts: and duration correlate at small durations while
they anticorrelate at large durations.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables, submitted to JGR special issue
"Response of Geospace to High-Speed Streams
Geoeffectiveness and efficiency of CIR, Sheath and ICME in generation of magnetic storms
We investigate relative role of various types of solar wind streams in
generation of magnetic storms. On the basis of the OMNI data of interplanetary
measurements for the period of 1976-2000 we analyze 798 geomagnetic storms with
Dst < -50 nT and their interplanetary sources: corotating interaction regions
(CIR), interplanetary CME (ICME) including magnetic clouds (MC) and Ejecta and
compression regions Sheath before both types of ICME. For various types of
solar wind we study following relative characteristics: occurrence rate; mass,
momentum, energy and magnetic fluxes; probability of generation of magnetic
storm (geoeffectiveness) and efficiency of process of this generation. Obtained
results show that despite magnetic clouds have lower occurrence rate and lower
efficiency than CIR and Sheath they play an essential role in generation of
magnetic storms due to higher geoeffectiveness of storm generation (i.e higher
probability to contain large and long-term southward IMF Bz component).Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, submitted to JGR special issue
"Response of Geospace to High-Speed Streams
No evidence for externally triggered substorms based on superposed epoch analysis of IMF Bz
Superposed epoch analyses have shown that, on average, the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) turns northward close to substorm onset. This has been commonly accepted as evidence for the substorm onset being triggered by a rapid northward turning of the IMF. Here we show that the tendency arises in any superposed epoch analysis of the IMF in which event onset is biased to occur for southward IMF, irrespective of a coincident rapid northward turning of the IMF. The overall IMF variation found in the largest superposed epoch analysis of this kind is also well reproduced using a Minimal Substorm Model in which substorm onsets are determined without the requirement of a northward IMF turning trigger. We discuss the explanation underlying these results and conclude that there is no conclusive evidence in favour of the hypothesis that substorm onsets are triggered by a rapid northward turning of the IMF. Citation: Freeman, M. P., and S. K. Morley (2009), No evidence for externally triggered substorms based on superposed epoch analysis of IMF B-z, Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L21101, doi: 10.1029/2009GL040621
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