EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere

We report observations of a sequence of quiet-time Earthward bursty bulk flows (BBFs) measured by the Cluster spacecraft in the near-tail plasma sheet (XGSM ~ −12 to −14 R E ) in the evening sector, and by simultaneous high-resolution measurements in the northern conjugate ionosphere by the EISCAT r...

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Published in:Annales Geophysicae
Main Authors: Pitkänen, T., Aikio, A. T., Amm, O., Kauristie, K., Nilsson, H., Kaila, K. U.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-29-299-2011
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/29/299/2011/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:angeo9344 2023-05-15T16:04:31+02:00 EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere Pitkänen, T. Aikio, A. T. Amm, O. Kauristie, K. Nilsson, H. Kaila, K. U. 2018-09-27 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-29-299-2011 https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/29/299/2011/ eng eng doi:10.5194/angeo-29-299-2011 https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/29/299/2011/ eISSN: 1432-0576 Text 2018 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-29-299-2011 2020-07-20T16:26:12Z We report observations of a sequence of quiet-time Earthward bursty bulk flows (BBFs) measured by the Cluster spacecraft in the near-tail plasma sheet (XGSM ~ −12 to −14 R E ) in the evening sector, and by simultaneous high-resolution measurements in the northern conjugate ionosphere by the EISCAT radars, a MIRACLE all-sky camera and magnetometers, as well as a meridian-scanning photometer (MSP) in the Scandinavian sector on 17 October 2005. The BBFs at Cluster show signatures that are consistent with the plasma "bubble" model (Chen and Wolf, 1993, 1999), e.g. deflection and compression of the ambient plasma in front of the Earthward moving bubble, magnetic signatures of a flow shear region, and the proper flows inside the bubble. In addition, clear signatures of tailward return flows around the edges of the bubble can be identified. The duskside return flows are associated with significant decrease in plasma density, giving support to the recent suggestion by Walsh et al. (2009) of formation of a depleted wake. However, the same feature is not seen for the dawnside return flows, but rather an increase in density. In the ionosphere, EISCAT and optical measurements show that each of the studied BBFs is associated with an auroral streamer that starts from the vicinity of the polar cap boundary, intrudes equatorward, brakes at 68–70° aacgm MLAT and drifts westward along the proton oval. Within the streamer itself and poleward of it, the ionospheric plasma flow has an equatorward component, which is the ionospheric manifestation of the Earthward BBF channel. A sharp velocity shear appears at the equatorward edge of a streamer. We suggest that each BBF creates a local velocity shear in the ionosphere, in which the plasma flow poleward of and inside the streamer is in the direction of the streamer and southeastward. A northwestward return flow is located on the equatorward side. The return flow is associated with decreased plasma densities both in the ionosphere and in the magnetosphere as measured by EISCAT and Cluster, respectively. In summary, we present the first simultaneous high-resolution observations of BBF return flows both in the plasma sheet and in the ionosphere, and those are in accordance with the bubble model. The results apply for the duskside return flows, but the manifestation of dawnside return flows in the ionosphere requires further studies. Finally, EISCAT measurements indicate increased nightside reconnection rate during the ~35-min period of BBFs. We suggest that the observed temporal event of IMF rotation to a more southward direction produces enhanced open flux transport to the nightside magnetotail, and consequently, the nightside reconnection rate is increased. Text EISCAT Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Annales Geophysicae 29 2 299 319
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description We report observations of a sequence of quiet-time Earthward bursty bulk flows (BBFs) measured by the Cluster spacecraft in the near-tail plasma sheet (XGSM ~ −12 to −14 R E ) in the evening sector, and by simultaneous high-resolution measurements in the northern conjugate ionosphere by the EISCAT radars, a MIRACLE all-sky camera and magnetometers, as well as a meridian-scanning photometer (MSP) in the Scandinavian sector on 17 October 2005. The BBFs at Cluster show signatures that are consistent with the plasma "bubble" model (Chen and Wolf, 1993, 1999), e.g. deflection and compression of the ambient plasma in front of the Earthward moving bubble, magnetic signatures of a flow shear region, and the proper flows inside the bubble. In addition, clear signatures of tailward return flows around the edges of the bubble can be identified. The duskside return flows are associated with significant decrease in plasma density, giving support to the recent suggestion by Walsh et al. (2009) of formation of a depleted wake. However, the same feature is not seen for the dawnside return flows, but rather an increase in density. In the ionosphere, EISCAT and optical measurements show that each of the studied BBFs is associated with an auroral streamer that starts from the vicinity of the polar cap boundary, intrudes equatorward, brakes at 68–70° aacgm MLAT and drifts westward along the proton oval. Within the streamer itself and poleward of it, the ionospheric plasma flow has an equatorward component, which is the ionospheric manifestation of the Earthward BBF channel. A sharp velocity shear appears at the equatorward edge of a streamer. We suggest that each BBF creates a local velocity shear in the ionosphere, in which the plasma flow poleward of and inside the streamer is in the direction of the streamer and southeastward. A northwestward return flow is located on the equatorward side. The return flow is associated with decreased plasma densities both in the ionosphere and in the magnetosphere as measured by EISCAT and Cluster, respectively. In summary, we present the first simultaneous high-resolution observations of BBF return flows both in the plasma sheet and in the ionosphere, and those are in accordance with the bubble model. The results apply for the duskside return flows, but the manifestation of dawnside return flows in the ionosphere requires further studies. Finally, EISCAT measurements indicate increased nightside reconnection rate during the ~35-min period of BBFs. We suggest that the observed temporal event of IMF rotation to a more southward direction produces enhanced open flux transport to the nightside magnetotail, and consequently, the nightside reconnection rate is increased.
format Text
author Pitkänen, T.
Aikio, A. T.
Amm, O.
Kauristie, K.
Nilsson, H.
Kaila, K. U.
spellingShingle Pitkänen, T.
Aikio, A. T.
Amm, O.
Kauristie, K.
Nilsson, H.
Kaila, K. U.
EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere
author_facet Pitkänen, T.
Aikio, A. T.
Amm, O.
Kauristie, K.
Nilsson, H.
Kaila, K. U.
author_sort Pitkänen, T.
title EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere
title_short EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere
title_full EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere
title_fullStr EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere
title_full_unstemmed EISCAT-Cluster observations of quiet-time near-Earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere
title_sort eiscat-cluster observations of quiet-time near-earth magnetotail fast flows and their signatures in the ionosphere
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-29-299-2011
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/29/299/2011/
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op_relation doi:10.5194/angeo-29-299-2011
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/29/299/2011/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-29-299-2011
container_title Annales Geophysicae
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