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Compression of the Earth's magnetotail by interplanetary shocks directly drives transient magnetic flux closure

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posted on 2010-05-17, 13:53 authored by B. Hubert, M. Palmroth, T. V. Laitinen, P. Janhunen, Steve E. Milan, Adrian Grocott, S. W. H. Cowley, T. I. Pulkkinen, J.-C. Gérard
We use a novel method to evaluate the global opening and closure of magnetic flux in the terrestrial system, and to analyse two interplanetary shock passages that occurred during magnetically quiet periods. We find that, even under these quiet conditions, where the amount of open flux was already low, the compression of the magnetotail by the shocks still created intense but short-lived bursts of flux closure reaching ∼130 kV, comparable to values obtained shortly after a substorm onset, although no expansion phase developed. The results, supported by a global MHD simulation of the space environment, point to a trigger mechanism of flux closure directly driven by the solar wind compression, independent of the usual substorm expansion phase process.

History

Citation

Geophysical Research Letters, 2006, 33, L10105.

Published in

Geophysical Research Letters

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

issn

0094-8276

Copyright date

2006

Available date

2010-05-17

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2006GL026008/abstract

Language

en

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