University of Leicester
Browse

Simultaneous observations of magnetopause flux transfer events and of their associated signatures at ionospheric altitudes

Download (1.4 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2017-04-21, 13:28 authored by K. A. McWilliams, G. J. Sofko, T. K. Yeoman, S. E. Milan, D. G. Sibeck, T. Nagai, T. Mukai, I. J. Coleman, T. Hori, F. J. Rich
An extensive variety of instruments, including Geotail, DMSP F11, SuperDARN, and IMP-8, were monitoring the dayside magnetosphere and ionosphere between 14:00 and 18:00 UT on 18 January 1999. The location of the instruments provided an excellent opportunity to study in detail the direct coupling between the solar wind, the magnetosphere, and the ionosphere. Flux transfer events were observed by Geotail near the magnetopause in the dawn side magnetosheath at about 4 magnetic local time during exclusively northward interplanetary magnetic field conditions. Excellent coverage of the entire dayside high-latitude ionosphere was achieved by the Northern Hemisphere SuperDARN radars. On the large scale, temporally and spatially, the dayside magnetosphere convection remained directly driven by the interplanetary magnetic field, despite the highly variable interplanetary magnetic field conditions, including long periods of northward field. The SuperDARN radars in the dawn sector also measured small-scale temporally varying convection velocities, which are indicative of flux transfer event activity, in the vicinity of the magnetic footprint of Geotail. DMSP F11 in the Southern Hemisphere measured typical cusp precipitation simultaneously with and magnetically conjugate to a single flux transfer event signature detected by Geotail. A study of the characteristics of the DMSP ion spectrogram revealed that the source plasma from the reconnection site originated downstream of the subsolar point. Detailed analyses of locally optimised coordinate systems for individual flux transfer events at Geotail are consistent with a series of flux tubes protruding from the magnetopause, and originating from a high-latitude reconnection site in the Southern Hemisphere. This high-latitude reconnection site agrees with plasma injected away from the subsolar point. This is the first simultaneous and independent determination from ionospheric and space-based data of the location of magnetic reconnection.

Funding

s. K. A. McWilliams is supported by NSERC through PDF-242485-2001 and a Collaborative Research Opportunities grant for “Scientific Personnel of the Canadian SuperDARN Program”. Work by D. G. Sibeck at JHU/APL and NASA/GSFC was supported by NAG5-10479. F. J. Rich is supported by the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research under Task 2311SDA3. 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. Newell for its use. We would like to thank R. P. Lepping, A. J. Lazarus and the NSSDC for providing IMP-8 data.

History

Citation

Annales Geophysicae, 2004, 22 (6), pp. 2181-2199 (19)

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)

issn

0992-7689

eissn

1432-0576

Acceptance date

2004-02-25

Copyright date

2004

Available date

2017-04-21

Publisher version

http://www.ann-geophys.net/22/2181/2004/

Notes

See also erratum at http://hdl.handle.net/2381/39687

Language

en