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Reliability of Matching AMPERE Field‐Aligned Current Boundaries With SuperDARN Lower Latitude Ionospheric Convection Boundaries During Geomagnetic Storms

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posted on 2025-03-07, 10:16 authored by M‐T Walach, AR Fogg, JC Coxon, A Grocott, Stephen MilanStephen Milan, HK Sangha, KA McWilliams, SK Vines, Mark LesterMark Lester, BJ Anderson
<p dir="ltr">High‐latitude ionospheric convection is a useful diagnostic of solar wind‐magnetosphere interactions and nightside activity in the magnetotail. For decades, the high‐latitude convection pattern has been mapped using the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN), a distribution of ground‐based radars which are capable of measuring line‐of‐sight (l‐o‐s) ionospheric flows. From the l‐o‐s measurements an estimate of the global convection can be obtained. As the SuperDARN coverage is not truly global, it is necessary to constrain the maps when the map fitting is performed. The lower latitude boundary of the convection, known as the Heppner‐Maynard boundary (HMB), provides one such constraint. In the standard SuperDARN fitting, the HMB location is determined directly from the data, but data gaps can make this challenging. In this study we evaluate if the HMB placement can be improved using data from the Active Magnetosphere and Planetary Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE), in particular for active time periods when the HMB moves to latitudes below . We find that the boundary as defined by SuperDARN and AMPERE are not always co‐located. SuperDARN performs better when the AMPERE currents are very weak (e.g., during non‐active times) and AMPERE can provide a boundary when there is no SuperDARN scatter. Using three geomagnetic storm events, we show that there is agreement between the SuperDARN and AMPERE boundaries but the SuperDARN‐derived convection boundary mostly lies equatorward of the AMPERE‐derived boundary. We find that disagreements primarily arise due to geometrical factors and a time lag in expansions and contractions of the patterns.</p>

Funding

Understanding the Energy Pathways of Earth's Magnetosphere

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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Predicting the upper atmospheric response to extremes of space weather forcing

Natural Environment Research Council

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Time-variability of the ionospheric electric field: solar wind driving and atmospheric feedback

Natural Environment Research Council

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Space Weather Instrumentation, Measurement, Modelling and Risk: Thermosphere (SWIMMR-T)

UK Research and Innovation

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GOIPD/2022/782

A Consolidated Grant Proposal for Solar and Planetary Science at the University of Leicester, 2022 - 2025

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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Unveiling the timescales and intensities of solar-terrestrial interactions using novel datasets and techniques

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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AGS-2002574

History

Citation

Walach, M.-T., Fogg, A. R., Coxon, J. C., Grocott, A., Milan, S. E., Sangha, H. K., et al. (2025). Reliability of matching AMPERE field-aligned current boundaries with SuperDARN lower latitude ionospheric convection boundaries during geomagnetic storms. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 130, e2024JA033253. https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JA033253

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics

Volume

130

Issue

1

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

issn

2169-9380

eissn

2169-9402

Acceptance date

2025-01-14

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-06-05

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Stephen Milan

Deposit date

2025-02-13

Data Access Statement

All SuperDARN and AMPERE data is openly available. Access to the SuperDARN database is available via the British Antarctic Survey and the University of Saskatchewan. The Radar Software Toolkit (RST) to process the SuperDARN data can be downloaded from https://github.com/SuperDARN/rst (SuperDARN Data Analysis Working Group, Thomas, Ponomarenko, Billett, et al., 2018). We thank the AMPERE team and the AMPERE Science Center for providing the Iridium derived data products. All AMPERE data are available online (via https://ampere.jhuapl.edu). The SuperDARN convection maps used in this study, as well as the polar plots of SuperDARN and AMPERE and the and values are available in Walach and Fogg (2024b). boundaries are available online (from https://doi.org/10.25392/leicester.data.11294861.v1). We acknowledge use of NASA/GSFC's Space Physics Data Facility's CDAWeb service, and OMNI data. In the SI we show the solar wind data and geomagnetic indices at 1-min resolution, which are extracted from the OMNI data (King & Papitashvili, 2005). The geomagnetic indices are also shown in Figures 1, 3 and 5. In the SI we also show, the dayside reconnection rate, which is derived from the OMNI data using the equation derived by Milan et al. (2012).

Rights Retention Statement

  • Yes

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