posted on 2017-01-24, 10:21authored byP. Prikryl, G. Provan, K. A. McWilliams, T. K. Yeoman
Pulsed ionospheric flows (PIFs) in the cusp foot-print have been observed by the SuperDARN radars with periods between a few minutes and several tens of minutes. PIFs are believed to be a consequence of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) reconnection with the magnetospheric magnetic field on the dayside magnetopause, ionospheric signatures of flux transfer events (FTEs). The quasiperiodic PIFs are correlated with Alfvénic fluctuations observed in the upstream solar wind. It is concluded that on these occasions, the FTEs were driven by Alfvén waves coupling to the day-side magnetosphere. Case studies are presented in which the dawn-dusk component of the Alfvén wave electric field modulates the reconnection rate as evidenced by the radar observations of the ionospheric cusp flows. The arrival of the IMF southward turning at the magnetopause is determined from multipoint solar wind magnetic field and/or plasma measurements, assuming plane phase fronts in solar wind. The cross-correlation lag between the solar wind data and ground magnetograms that were obtained near the cusp footprint exceeded the estimated spacecraft-to-magnetopause propagation time by up to several minutes. The difference can account for and/or exceeds the Alfvén propagation time between the magnetopause and ionosphere. For the case of short period ( < 13 min) PIFs, the onset times of the flow transients appear to be further delayed by at most a few more minutes after the IMF southward turning arrived at the magnetopause. For the case of long period (30 – 40 min) PIFs, the observed additional delays were 10–20 min. We interpret the excess delay in terms of an intrinsic time scale for reconnection (Russell et al., 1997) which can be explained by the surface-wave induced magnetic reconnection mechanism (Uberoi et al., 1999). Here, surface waves with wavelengths larger than the thickness of the neutral layer induce a tearing-mode instability whose rise time explains the observed delay of the reconnection onset. The compressional fluctuations in solar wind and those generated in the magnetosheath through the interaction between the solar wind Alfvén waves and the bow shock were the source of magnetopause surface waves inducing reconnection.
Funding
CUTLASS SuperDARN radar is supported by
the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC),
UK, the Swedish Institute for Space Physics, Uppsala, and the
Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki. The IMAGE magnetometer
data used in this paper were collected as a German-FinnishNorwegian-Polish
project conducted by the Technical University of Braunschweig. We benefited from discussions with G. James, D.
McDiarmid and D. Sibeck. D. Sibeck supplied the minimum variance
analysis computer code. We acknowledge contributions by
principal investigators of the ACE, GEOTAIL, IMP-8, WIND, and
INTERBALL-1 instruments, namely, E. Stone (Advanced Composition
Explorer), S. Kokubun (Magnetic Field Measurements), T.
Mukai (Low Energy Particles), K. Tsuruda (Electric Field Measurements),
A. Lazarus (Plasma Instrument), R. Lepping (Magnetic
Field Investigation), R. Lin (Three-Dimensional Plasma Analyzer),
and S. Romanov (Magnetic Field Investigation).
History
Citation
Annales Geophysicae, 2002, 20 (2), pp. 161-174 (14)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Annales Geophysicae
Publisher
European Geosciences Union (EGU), Copernicus Publications, Springer Verlag (Germany)