1 research outputs found
On the Creation, Depletion, and End of Life of Polar Cap Patches
Ionospheric convection patterns from the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network are used to determine the trajectories, transit times, and decay rates of three polar cap patches from their creation in the dayside polar cap ionosphere to their end of life on the nightside. The first two polar cap patches were created within 12Â min of each other and traveled through the dayside convection throat, before entering the nightside auroral oval after 104 and 92Â min, respectively. When the patches approached the nightside auroral oval, an intensification in the poleward auroral boundary occurred close to their exit point, followed by a decrease in the transit velocity. The last patch (patch 3) decayed completely within the polar cap and had a lifetime of only 78Â min. After a change in drift direction, patch 3 had a radar backscatter power halfâlife of 4.23Â min, which reduced to 1.80Â min after a stagnation, indicating a variable decay rate. 28Â minutes after the change in direction, and 16Â min after coming to a halt within the Clyde River radar fieldâofâview, patch 3 appeared to reach its end of life. We relate this rapid decay to increased frictional heating, which speeds up the recombination rate. Therefore, we suggest that the slowed patch motion within the polar cap convection pattern is a major factor in determining whether the patch survives as a recognizable density enhancement by the time the flux tubes comprising the initial patch cross into the nightside auroral oval.</p