posted on 2017-03-28, 08:48authored byG. Chisham, M. P. Freeman, I. J. Coleman, M. Pinnock, M. R. Hairston, M. Lester, G. Sofko
This study presents, for the first time, detailed spatiotemporal measurements of the reconnection electric field in the Northern Hemisphere ionosphere during an extended interval of northward interplanetary magnetic field. Global convection mapping using the SuperDARN HF radar network provides global estimates of the convection electric field in the northern polar ionosphere. These are combined with measurements of the ionospheric footprint of the reconnection X-line to determine the spatiotemporal variation of the reconnection electric field along the whole X-line. The shape of the spatial variation is stable throughout the interval, although its magnitude does change with time. Consequently, the total reconnection potential along the X-line is temporally variable but its typical magnitude is consistent with the cross-polar cap potential measured by low-altitude satellite overpasses. The reconnection measurements are mapped out from the ionosphere along Tsyganenko model magnetic field lines to determine the most likely reconnection location on the lobe magnetopause. The X-line length on the lobe magnetopause is estimated to be ~6–11 RE in extent, depending on the assumptions made when determining the length of the ionospheric X-line. The reconnection electric field on the lobe magnetopause is estimated to be ~0.2mV/m in the peak reconnection region.
Funding
We would like to thank the principal investigators
of SuperDARN radars used in this study; R. A. Greenwald (Goose Bay and Kapuskasing) and J.-P. Villain (Stokkseyri). CUTLASS
is supported by the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research
Council, UK, the Swedish Institute for Space Physics, Uppsala,
and the Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki. Support for the
Goose Bay and Kapuskasing radars is provided in part by the NSF
and in part by NASA. Support for the Stokkseyri radar is provided
by the CNRS/INSU. Support for the Saskatoon radar is provided by
NSERC, Canada. The DMSP particle detectors were designed by
D. Hardy of AFRL, and data obtained from JHU/APL. We thank
D. Hardy, F. Rich, and P. T. Newell for its use. DMSP ion-drift
data and analysis were provided under NSF grant ATM-9713436
and NASA grant NAG5-9297. The WIND and ACE data are part
of the CDAWeb database. We are grateful to R. Lepping, principal
investigator on the WIND MFI instrument, K. Ogilvie, principal investigator
on the WIND SWE instrument, and N. F. Ness, principal
investigator on the ACE MFI instrument.
History
Citation
Annales Geophysicae, 2004, 22 (12), pp. 4243-4258 (16)
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)