posted on 2012-10-24, 09:05authored byJ. A. Wild, T. K. Yeoman
High-time resolution CUTLASS observations and ground-based magnetometers have been employed to study the occurrence of vortical flow structures propagating through the high-latitude ionosphere during magnetospheric substorms. Fast-moving flow vortices (~800 m s-1) associated with Hall currents flowing around upward directed field-aligned currents are frequently observed propagating at high speed (~1 km s-1) azimuthally away from the region of the ionosphere associated with the location of the substorm expansion phase onset. Furthermore, a statistical analysis drawn from over 1000 h of high-time resolution, nightside radar data has enabled the characterisation of the bulk properties of these vortical flow systems. Their occurrence with respect to substorm phase has been investigated and a possible generation mechanism has been suggested.
History
Citation
ANNALES GEOPHYSICAE-ATMOSPHERES HYDROSPHERES AND SPACE SCIENCES, 2000, 18 (6), pp. 640-652
Published in
ANNALES GEOPHYSICAE-ATMOSPHERES HYDROSPHERES AND SPACE SCIENCES
Publisher
European Geosciences Union (EGU), Copernicus Publications, Springer Verlag (Germany)