Under a northward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) with Bx ∼ 0, conjugate transpolar auroral arcs (TPAs) often appear on opposite polar cap sides in both hemispheres. These TPAs often show movement in response to IMF By changes. For example, a negative-to-positive IMF By shift moves northern TPAs from dawn to dusk, with southern TPAs moving oppositely. A popular model links these TPAs to lobe reconnection changes, but it's based on single-hemisphere observations and lacks confirming evidence from both hemispheres. In this study, utilizing simultaneous DMSP/SSUSI observations from both hemispheres, we examined a well-chosen event to track the formation and evolution of conjugate TPAs and compared the results with global MHD simulations. We found that: initially, when IMF By was ∼ −7 nT, conjugate TPAs were observed in the dawn/dusk side in the Northern/Southern Hemisphere, and MHD simulations showed that single-lobe reconnection occurs at the dawnside/duskside lobe in the Northern/Southern Hemisphere, respectively. As the IMF By gradually changed to 0, the TPAs in both hemispheres shifted to the polar cap center and dual-lobe reconnection began to appear in the simulation results. We also notice that there is a transitional phase where both single- and dual-lobe reconnections co-exist before dual-lobe reconnection dominates. Based on these results, we argue that here we provide strong evidence for Milan's model that the evolution of conjugate TPAs is associated with changes in the location and pattern of lobe reconnection driven by variations in IMF By.<p></p>
Funding
National Natural Science Foundation of China. Grant Numbers: 42030101, 42374191
History
Author affiliation
University of Leicester
College of Science & Engineering
Physics & Astronomy
The IMF and solar wind data (Bargatze et al., 2005) used in this study are publicly available from the OMNI database via (https://spdf.gsfc.nasa.gov/pub/data/omni/). The particle data (Hardy et al., 1984; Rich & Hairston, 1994) used in this study are publicly available from the NOAA database via (https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/data/dmsp-space-weather-sensors/access/). The DMSP/SSUSI data (Paxton et al., 1992) used in this study can be accessed from this DOI link (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15379443). The OpenGGCM (Raeder, 2003; Raeder et al., 2008) simulation data can be accessed from this DOI link (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15379443).