27 research outputs found

    Modulation of Magnetospheric Substorm Frequency: Dipole Tilt and IMF By Effects

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    Substorm activity is heavily influenced by the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) Bz component and magnetospheric substorms occur most frequently when Bz is strongly negative. The substorm occurrence rate is also affected by the magnitude of the By component, but it is usually presumed that this contribution is independent of the sign of By. Using five independent substorm onset lists, we show that substorm activity does depend on the sign of By near the solstices. Specifically, we show that substorms occur more frequently when By and the dipole tilt angle Ψ have different signs as opposed to when they have the same sign. These results confirm that the magnetosphere exhibits an explicit dependence on the polarity of By for nonzero Ψ, as other recent studies have suggested, and imply variation in the dayside reconnection rate and/or the magnetotail response. On the other hand, we find no clear relationship between substorm intensity and By regardless of Ψ. Last, for the onset list based on identifying negative bays at auroral latitudes, we observe an overall trend of more frequent onsets for positive By, regardless of season. However, substorm frequency in the other four substorm lists does not exhibit an overall preference for positive By. We show that this phenomenon is very likely a consequence of the particular substorm identification method (i.e., identification of negative bays), which is affected by local ionospheric conditions that depend on By and Ψ.publishedVersio

    Evolution of IMF By induced asymmetries during substorms: Superposed epoch analysis at geosynchronous orbit

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    The By component of the magnetic field inside the magnetosphere is positively correlated with the By component of the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF). This leads to asymmetries in aurora, plasma convection and electric currents between the northern and southern hemispheres It has been demonstrated that magnetic conjugate locations in the northern and southern ionosphere become less displaced during magnetospheric substorms, which are associated with enhanced reconnection in the near-Earth tail. Here we directly address how the average By component in the magnetotail evolves relative to substorm onset by performing a superposed epoch analysis of the magnetic field observed at nightside geosynchronous orbit during periods with dominant IMF By. The observations demonstrate that the average |By| in the magnetotail increases during the loading phase prior to onset. |By| maximizes in the expansion phase and is subsequently reduced during the remaining unloading phase. The observed trends become more pronounced using substorm onset lists that on average identify stronger substorms. Since dayside reconnection dominates over tail reconnection during the loading phase, whereas tail reconnection dominates during the unloading phase, the results demonstrate how asymmetries build up during periods with low tail reconnection and are reduced during periods with enhanced tail reconnection in agreement with previous case studies of conjugate auroral substorm features.publishedVersio

    The Magnitude of IMF By Influences the Magnetotail Response to Solar Wind Forcing

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    Under embargo until: 2022-04-21The dynamics of substorms are known to be dominated by the North-South (Bz) component of the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF), which is the most important driver of the dayside reconnection. Even though the dawn-dusk (By) component is also known to play a role in substorm dynamics, its effects are not yet fully understood. In this paper we study how IMF By modulates the onset latitude, strength and occurrence frequency of substorms as well as the isotropic boundary (IB) latitude of energetic protons. We show that the substorm onset latitude and the IB latitude are about one degree lower for large magnitude By (>|By>|>3 nT) than for small By. In contrast, the substorm occurrence frequency is larger for small >|By>|. We suggest that the magnetotail is more stable during large >|By>|, requiring the magnetotail lobes (and hence the polar cap) to contain more flux to initiate a substorm compared to the situation when By is small.publishedVersio

    An explicit IMF By dependence on solar wind ‐ magnetosphere coupling

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    Presently, all empirical coupling functions quantifying the solar wind—magnetosphere energy—or magnetic flux conversion assume that the coupling is independent of the sign of the dawn-dusk component (B) of the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF). In this paper we present observations strongly suggesting an explicit IMF B effect on the solar wind-magnetosphere coupling. When the Earth's dipole is tilted in the direction corresponding to northern winter, positive IMF B is found to on average lead to a larger polar cap than when IMF B is negative during otherwise similar conditions. This explicit IMF B effect is found to reverse when the Earth's dipole is inclined in the opposite direction (northern summer) and is consistently observed from both hemispheres. We interpret the different responses of the polar cap size due to the sign of IMF B to likely be a result of differences in the dayside reconnection rate.publishedVersio

    The relationship between interhemispheric asymmetries in polar ionospheric convection and the magnetic field line footpoint displacement field

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    Polar electrodynamics is largely controlled by solar wind and magnetospheric forcing. Different conditions can make plasma convection and magnetic field disturbances asymmetric between hemispheres. So far, these asymmetries have been studied in isolation. We present an explanation of how they are linked via displacements of magnetic field line footpoints between hemispheres, under the assumption of ideal magnetohydrodynamics. This displacement has so far been studied only on a point by point basis; here we generalize the concept to a 2D displacement vector field. We estimate displacement fields from average patterns of ionospheric convection using the Weimer et al. (J. Geophys. Res., 2005a, 110, A05306) model. These estimates confirm that the influence of the interplanetary magnetic field extends deep into the magnetosphere, as predicted by models and in-situ observations. Contrary to predictions, the displacement associated with dipole tilt appears uniform across the nightside, and it exceeds the effect of IMF By. While more research is needed to confirm these specific findings, our results demonstrate how ionospheric observations can be used to infer magnetospheric morphology, and that the displacement field is a critical component for understanding geospace as a coupled two-hemisphere system.publishedVersio

    Transient high latitude geomagnetic response to rapid increases in solar wind dynamic pressure

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    Rapid changes in solar wind dynamic pressure can produce a transient geomagnetic response in the high latitude ionosphere. In this study we carry out a superposed epoch analysis of the geomagnetic response based on 2,058 events. The events are divided into 12 groups based on interplanetary magnetic field clock angle and dipole tilt and the magnetic perturbation field is modeled using spherical harmonics. We find that the high latitude transient current vortices associated with a sudden commencement are most clearly observed when the interplanetary magnetic field is northward during equinox and winter in the northern hemisphere. The high latitude geomagnetic response during northward interplanetary magnetic field is decomposed into a preliminary and main impulse. The preliminary impulse onset is 1–2 min prior to the onset of the low/mid latitude geomagnetic response and its rise time is 4–6 min. The main impulse onset is around 2 min after the low/mid latitude geomagnetic response and has a rise time of 6–11 min. When examining the change relative to pre-onset conditions a coherent transient geomagnetic response emerges for all IMF clock and dipole tilt angles. The current vortex associated with the main impulse on the dawnside appears at (9.3 ± 0.5 mlt, 64.8° ± 1.5° mlat) and moves westward with a velocity of 5 ± 1.4 km/s. The vortex on the duskside appears at (15.3 ± 0.9 mlt, 65.8° ± 2.5° mlat) and does not move significantly. In addition, the models were used to recreate the SMR index showing a significant mlt dependence on the magnetic perturbation above 40° mlat and below 10° mlat. The former is thought to be caused by high latitude ionospheric currents. The latter is potentially a combination of the event occurrence probability being skewed toward certain UT ranges for large dipole tilt angles and a UT dependence of the equatorial electrojet magnitude caused by the south atlantic magnetic anomaly.publishedVersio

    Substorm Impact on Dayside Ionospheric Currents

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    Ionospheric dayside dynamics is strongly controlled by the interaction between the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) and the Earth's magnetic field near the dayside magnetopause, while nightside ionospheric dynamics depends mainly on magnetotail activity. However, we know little about the influence of magnetotail activity on the dayside ionospheric dynamics. We investigate this by performing superposed epoch analyses of ground magnetic field data for substorms occurring during northward IMF. In such substorms, dayside reconnection is minimized, allowing us to separate the effects of the magnetotail activity on the dayside current system. We find that as nightside activity elevates, the dayside ionospheric current elevates. Our analyses indicate that the lobe cells are less distinct before onset than during non-substorm northward IMF conditions. They become more pronounced after onset, possibly due to magnetospheric reconfiguration or a remote effect of the nightside current. We discuss possible mechanisms that may explain our observations.publishedVersio

    Dependence of the global dayside reconnection rate on interplanetary magnetic field By and the earth’s dipole tilt

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    In the recent years, significant attention has been given to the combined effect of Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) duskward component (By) and dipole tilt on the global magnetosphere-ionosphere system response. Numerous studies have pointed out that when the Earth’s magnetic dipole is tilted away from the Sun (negative dipole tilt during northern winter), and IMF has a positive By component, the effects on ionospheric currents, particle precipitation, ionospheric convection, and average size of the auroral oval, is significantly more enhanced, compared to when IMF By is negative. Furthermore, this IMF By polarity effect reverses when Earth’s dipole is tilted in the opposite direction. The underlying cause has remained unclear. Our analysis shows that substorms tend to be stronger during the same IMF By and dipole tilt polarity combination. Taken together with earlier results showing also more frequent substorms during the same conditions, our observations suggests that when IMF By and dipole tilt have opposite signs, there is a more efficient global dayside reconnection rate. We also show analysis of the occurrence frequency of periods of Steady Magnetospheric Convection, substorm onset latitude, and the isotropic boundary of proton precipitation, that are all consistent with our conclusion that the combination of IMF By and dipole tilt polarity affect the global dayside reconnection rate.publishedVersio

    Evolution of IMF By Induced Asymmetries: The Role of Tail Reconnection

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    North-south asymmetries arise in the magnetosphere-ionosphere system when a significant east-west (By) component is present in the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF). During such conditions, a By component with the same sign as the IMF By component is induced in the magnetosphere, and the locations of conjugate magnetic footpoints are displaced between the two hemispheres. It has been suggested that these asymmetries are introduced into the closed magnetosphere by tail reconnection. However, recent studies instead suggest that asymmetric lobe pressure induces the asymmetries, which are then reduced during periods of enhanced tail reconnection. To address this, we use the Lyon-Fedder-Mobarry (LFM) model and initiate a loading-unloading cycle in multiple runs by changing the IMF. Asymmetries are induced during the loading phase and reduced during the unloading phase. The model results thus suggest that asymmetries arise during periods with low tail reconnection and are reduced during periods with enhanced tail reconnection.publishedVersio

    Geomagnetic Response to Rapid Increases in Solar Wind Dynamic Pressure: Event Detection and Large Scale Response

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    Discontinuities in the solar wind trigger a variety of processes in the magnetosphere-ionosphere system. A rapid increase in solar wind dynamic pressure causes compression of the magnetosphere. This manifests itself as a positive perturbation of the horizontal ground magnetic field at low/mid latitudes. In this study we present a method for detecting these discontinuities in situ solar wind data by using the random forest machine learning algorithm. Each detected event is propagated to Earth and its arrival time is aligned with a corresponding response in the low latitude ground magnetic field. A list of 3,867 events, detected between 1994 and 2019, is presented. We use the list in a superposed epoch analysis of the low/mid latitude response in the ground magnetic field at different local times, and of the high latitude response using the Polar Cap index. A dawn-dusk asymmetry is found at low/mid latitudes with weaker positive perturbations at dawn compared to any other local time sector. This suggests a stronger ring current contribution at dawn assuming the magnetopause contribution to be uniform. During northward IMF the initial response is asymmetric, but returns to symmetry after 30 min. During southward IMF the low/mid latitude response decays rapidly in all local sectors except dawn. After around 30 min the asymmetry has flipped such that the strongest positive perturbation is at dawn. This suggests an amplification of the partial ring current. In addition, a noon-midnight asymmetry is observed during southward IMF with the strongest positive perturbation on the night side suggesting a significant contribution from dipolarization of the geomagnetic field in the near tail. The complex geomagnetic response to rapid increases in solar wind dynamic pressure demonstrates a need for further statistical analyses. Event lists, such as the one presented here, are critical components in such studies.publishedVersio
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