Polar cap influx

International audience This study uses digital ionosonde data from a cusp latitude station (Cambridge Bay, 77° CGM lat.) to study the convection into the polar cap. Days when the IMF magnetic field was relatively steady were used. On many days it was possible to distinguish an interval near noon MLT...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Macdougall, J., Jayachandran, P. T.
Other Authors: Dept. Electrical Engineering, University of Western Ontario (UWO)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-00317826
https://hal.science/hal-00317826/document
https://hal.science/hal-00317826/file/angeo-23-1755-2005.pdf
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spelling ftccsdartic:oai:HAL:hal-00317826v1 2023-11-12T04:15:33+01:00 Polar cap influx Macdougall, J. Jayachandran, P. T. Dept. Electrical Engineering University of Western Ontario (UWO) 2005-07-28 https://hal.science/hal-00317826 https://hal.science/hal-00317826/document https://hal.science/hal-00317826/file/angeo-23-1755-2005.pdf en eng HAL CCSD European Geosciences Union hal-00317826 https://hal.science/hal-00317826 https://hal.science/hal-00317826/document https://hal.science/hal-00317826/file/angeo-23-1755-2005.pdf info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess ISSN: 0992-7689 EISSN: 1432-0576 Annales Geophysicae https://hal.science/hal-00317826 Annales Geophysicae, 2005, 23 (5), pp.1755-1761 [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean Atmosphere [SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences info:eu-repo/semantics/article Journal articles 2005 ftccsdartic 2023-10-21T23:07:07Z International audience This study uses digital ionosonde data from a cusp latitude station (Cambridge Bay, 77° CGM lat.) to study the convection into the polar cap. Days when the IMF magnetic field was relatively steady were used. On many days it was possible to distinguish an interval near noon MLT when the ionosonde data had a different character from that at earlier and later times. Based on our data, and other published measurements, we used the interval 10:00-13:00 MLT as the cusp interval and calculated the convection into the polar cap in this interval. The integrated convection accounted for only ~1/3 of the open polar cap flux. If the convection through the prenoon/postnoon regions on either side of the cusp was calculated the remaining 2/3 of the flux could be accounted for. The characteristics of the prenoon/postnoon regions were different from the cusp region, and we attribute this to transient flank merging versus more steady frontside merging for the cusp. Keywords. Ionosphere (Plasma convection) Magnetospheric physics (Polar cap phenomenon) Article in Journal/Newspaper Cambridge Bay Archive ouverte HAL (Hyper Article en Ligne, CCSD - Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe) Cambridge Bay ENVELOPE(-105.130,-105.130,69.037,69.037)
institution Open Polar
collection Archive ouverte HAL (Hyper Article en Ligne, CCSD - Centre pour la Communication Scientifique Directe)
op_collection_id ftccsdartic
language English
topic [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean
Atmosphere
[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences
spellingShingle [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean
Atmosphere
[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences
Macdougall, J.
Jayachandran, P. T.
Polar cap influx
topic_facet [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean
Atmosphere
[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences
description International audience This study uses digital ionosonde data from a cusp latitude station (Cambridge Bay, 77° CGM lat.) to study the convection into the polar cap. Days when the IMF magnetic field was relatively steady were used. On many days it was possible to distinguish an interval near noon MLT when the ionosonde data had a different character from that at earlier and later times. Based on our data, and other published measurements, we used the interval 10:00-13:00 MLT as the cusp interval and calculated the convection into the polar cap in this interval. The integrated convection accounted for only ~1/3 of the open polar cap flux. If the convection through the prenoon/postnoon regions on either side of the cusp was calculated the remaining 2/3 of the flux could be accounted for. The characteristics of the prenoon/postnoon regions were different from the cusp region, and we attribute this to transient flank merging versus more steady frontside merging for the cusp. Keywords. Ionosphere (Plasma convection) Magnetospheric physics (Polar cap phenomenon)
author2 Dept. Electrical Engineering
University of Western Ontario (UWO)
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Macdougall, J.
Jayachandran, P. T.
author_facet Macdougall, J.
Jayachandran, P. T.
author_sort Macdougall, J.
title Polar cap influx
title_short Polar cap influx
title_full Polar cap influx
title_fullStr Polar cap influx
title_full_unstemmed Polar cap influx
title_sort polar cap influx
publisher HAL CCSD
publishDate 2005
url https://hal.science/hal-00317826
https://hal.science/hal-00317826/document
https://hal.science/hal-00317826/file/angeo-23-1755-2005.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-105.130,-105.130,69.037,69.037)
geographic Cambridge Bay
geographic_facet Cambridge Bay
genre Cambridge Bay
genre_facet Cambridge Bay
op_source ISSN: 0992-7689
EISSN: 1432-0576
Annales Geophysicae
https://hal.science/hal-00317826
Annales Geophysicae, 2005, 23 (5), pp.1755-1761
op_relation hal-00317826
https://hal.science/hal-00317826
https://hal.science/hal-00317826/document
https://hal.science/hal-00317826/file/angeo-23-1755-2005.pdf
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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