Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate

Using data from the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF and CUTLASS (Co-operative UK Twin-Located Auroral Sounding System) HF radars, we study the formation of ionospheric polar cap patches and their relationship to the magnetopause reconnection pulses identified in the companion paper by Lockw...

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Published in:Annales Geophysicae
Main Authors: Lockwood, M., Davies, J. A., Moen, J., Eyken, A. P., Oksavik, K., McCrea, I. W., Lester, M.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-23-3513-2005
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/23/3513/2005/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:angeo35892 2023-05-15T16:04:37+02:00 Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate Lockwood, M. Davies, J. A. Moen, J. Eyken, A. P. Oksavik, K. McCrea, I. W. Lester, M. 2018-09-27 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-23-3513-2005 https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/23/3513/2005/ eng eng doi:10.5194/angeo-23-3513-2005 https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/23/3513/2005/ eISSN: 1432-0576 Text 2018 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-23-3513-2005 2020-07-20T16:27:20Z Using data from the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF and CUTLASS (Co-operative UK Twin-Located Auroral Sounding System) HF radars, we study the formation of ionospheric polar cap patches and their relationship to the magnetopause reconnection pulses identified in the companion paper by Lockwood et al.(2005). It is shown that the poleward-moving, high-concentration plasma patches observed in the ionosphere by EISCAT on 23November 1999, as reported by Davies et al.(2002), were often associated with corresponding reconnection rate pulses. However, not all such pulses generated a patch and only within a limited MLT range (11:00-12:00MLT) did a patch result from a reconnection pulse. Three proposed mechanisms for the production of patches, and of the concentration minima that separate them, are analysed and evaluated: (1) concentration enhancement within the patches by cusp/cleft precipitation; (2) plasma depletion in the minima between the patches by fast plasma flows; and (3) intermittent injection of photoionisation-enhanced plasma into the polar cap. We devise a test to distinguish between the effects of these mechanisms. Some of the events repeat too frequently to apply the test. Others have sufficiently long repeat periods and mechanism (3) is shown to be the only explanation of three of the longer-lived patches seen on this day. However, effect (2) also appears to contribute to some events. We conclude that plasma concentration gradients on the edges of the larger patches arise mainly from local time variations in the subauroral plasma, via the mechanism proposed by Lockwood et al.(2000). Text EISCAT Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Lockwood ENVELOPE(167.400,167.400,-84.150,-84.150) Annales Geophysicae 23 11 3513 3532
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description Using data from the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF and CUTLASS (Co-operative UK Twin-Located Auroral Sounding System) HF radars, we study the formation of ionospheric polar cap patches and their relationship to the magnetopause reconnection pulses identified in the companion paper by Lockwood et al.(2005). It is shown that the poleward-moving, high-concentration plasma patches observed in the ionosphere by EISCAT on 23November 1999, as reported by Davies et al.(2002), were often associated with corresponding reconnection rate pulses. However, not all such pulses generated a patch and only within a limited MLT range (11:00-12:00MLT) did a patch result from a reconnection pulse. Three proposed mechanisms for the production of patches, and of the concentration minima that separate them, are analysed and evaluated: (1) concentration enhancement within the patches by cusp/cleft precipitation; (2) plasma depletion in the minima between the patches by fast plasma flows; and (3) intermittent injection of photoionisation-enhanced plasma into the polar cap. We devise a test to distinguish between the effects of these mechanisms. Some of the events repeat too frequently to apply the test. Others have sufficiently long repeat periods and mechanism (3) is shown to be the only explanation of three of the longer-lived patches seen on this day. However, effect (2) also appears to contribute to some events. We conclude that plasma concentration gradients on the edges of the larger patches arise mainly from local time variations in the subauroral plasma, via the mechanism proposed by Lockwood et al.(2000).
format Text
author Lockwood, M.
Davies, J. A.
Moen, J.
Eyken, A. P.
Oksavik, K.
McCrea, I. W.
Lester, M.
spellingShingle Lockwood, M.
Davies, J. A.
Moen, J.
Eyken, A. P.
Oksavik, K.
McCrea, I. W.
Lester, M.
Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate
author_facet Lockwood, M.
Davies, J. A.
Moen, J.
Eyken, A. P.
Oksavik, K.
McCrea, I. W.
Lester, M.
author_sort Lockwood, M.
title Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate
title_short Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate
title_full Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate
title_fullStr Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate
title_full_unstemmed Motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: II. Generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate
title_sort motion of the dayside polar cap boundary during substorm cycles: ii. generation of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches by pulses in the magnetopause reconnection rate
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-23-3513-2005
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/23/3513/2005/
long_lat ENVELOPE(167.400,167.400,-84.150,-84.150)
geographic Lockwood
geographic_facet Lockwood
genre EISCAT
genre_facet EISCAT
op_source eISSN: 1432-0576
op_relation doi:10.5194/angeo-23-3513-2005
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/23/3513/2005/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-23-3513-2005
container_title Annales Geophysicae
container_volume 23
container_issue 11
container_start_page 3513
op_container_end_page 3532
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