posted on 2016-02-22, 16:42authored byC. Forsyth, C. E. J. Watt, I. J. Rae, A. N. Fazakerley, N. M. E. Kalmoni, M. P. Freeman, P. D. Boakes, R. Nakamura, I. Dandouras, L. M. Kistler, C. M. Jackman, J. C. Coxon, C. M. Carr
During substorm growth phases, magnetic reconnection at the magnetopause extracts ~1015 J from the solar wind which is then stored in the magnetotail lobes. Plasma sheet pressure increases to balance magnetic flux density increases in the lobes. Here we examine plasma sheet pressure, density, and temperature during substorm growth phases using 9 years of Cluster data (>316,000 data points). We show that plasma sheet pressure and temperature are higher during growth phases with higher solar wind driving, whereas the density is approximately constant. We also show a weak correlation between plasma sheet temperature before onset and the minimum SuperMAG AL (SML) auroral index in the subsequent substorm. We discuss how energization of the plasma sheet before onset may result from thermodynamically adiabatic processes; how hotter plasma sheets may result in magnetotail instabilities, and how this relates to the onset and size of the subsequent substorm expansion phase.
Funding
The ECLAT project
data were funded by FP7 grant
number 263325. I.J.R., C.M.J., and
M.P.F. were supported in part by
National Environmental Research Council
(NERC) grant NE/L007495/1. A.N.F. was
funded by STFC Consolidated grant
ST/K000977/1. C.F. was funded in part by
the NERC and STFC grants. P.D.B. was
funded by Austrian Science Fund FWF
P24740-N27. J.C.C. and N.M.E.K. were
funded by STFC studentships.