Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon

Using ground-based high temporal and spatial optical aurora observations, we investigated one fortuitous event to illustrate the direct responses of the fine structure auroral emission to interplanetary shock on 7 January 2005. During the shock impact to the magnetosphere, the Chinese Arctic Yellow...

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Main Authors: Jianjun Liu, Hongqiao Hu, Desheng Han, Huigen Yang, Mark Lester
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Simultaneous_ground-based_optical_and_SuperDARN_observations_of_the_shock_aurora_at_MLT_noon/10150448
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spelling ftleicesterunfig:oai:figshare.com:article/10150448 2023-05-15T15:16:45+02:00 Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon Jianjun Liu Hongqiao Hu Desheng Han Huigen Yang Mark Lester 2015-07-29T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Simultaneous_ground-based_optical_and_SuperDARN_observations_of_the_shock_aurora_at_MLT_noon/10150448 unknown 2381/32946 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Simultaneous_ground-based_optical_and_SuperDARN_observations_of_the_shock_aurora_at_MLT_noon/10150448 All Rights Reserved Uncategorized Interplanetary shock Optical aurora Sudden impulse Sunward flow SuperDARN Text Journal contribution 2015 ftleicesterunfig 2021-11-11T19:51:31Z Using ground-based high temporal and spatial optical aurora observations, we investigated one fortuitous event to illustrate the direct responses of the fine structure auroral emission to interplanetary shock on 7 January 2005. During the shock impact to the magnetosphere, the Chinese Arctic Yellow River Station (YRS) equipped with all-sky imagers (ASIs) was situated at the magnetic local noon region (~1210 MLT) in the Northern Hemisphere, while the SuperDARN CUTLASS Finland HF radar covering the field of view (FOV) of the ASIs at YRS had fine ionospheric plasma convection measurement. We observed that an intensified red aurora manifesting as a discrete emission band at a higher latitude responds to the shock impact gradually, which results in a distinct broadening of the dayside auroral oval due to the equatorward shifting of its lower latitude boundary after the shock arrival. In contrast, the green diffuse aurora, manifesting as a relatively uniform luminosity structure, reacts immediately to the shock compression, displaying prompt appearance in the southern edge of the FOV and subsequent poleward propagation of its higher latitude boundary. Simultaneously, the CUTLASS Finland radar monitored enhanced backscatter echo power and increased echo number, which coincided with intensified discrete aurora in approximately the same latitudinal region. Doppler velocity measurement showed moving ionospheric irregularities with generally enhanced line-of-sight (LOS) speed, but with prominent sunward flow in the polar cap and antisunward flow in both the eastern and western regions. The SuperDARN global ionospheric convection pattern clearly presented a large-scale plasma flow divided in four circulation cells, with two reversed flow cells nested in the noon sector of the polar cap. These direct observations strongly suggest that the prompt shock compression intensified the wave-particle interaction in the inner magnetosphere and enhanced the lobe magnetic reconnection rate at magnetospheric high latitude. Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper Arctic University of Leicester: Figshare Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Leicester: Figshare
op_collection_id ftleicesterunfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorized
Interplanetary shock
Optical aurora
Sudden impulse
Sunward flow
SuperDARN
spellingShingle Uncategorized
Interplanetary shock
Optical aurora
Sudden impulse
Sunward flow
SuperDARN
Jianjun Liu
Hongqiao Hu
Desheng Han
Huigen Yang
Mark Lester
Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon
topic_facet Uncategorized
Interplanetary shock
Optical aurora
Sudden impulse
Sunward flow
SuperDARN
description Using ground-based high temporal and spatial optical aurora observations, we investigated one fortuitous event to illustrate the direct responses of the fine structure auroral emission to interplanetary shock on 7 January 2005. During the shock impact to the magnetosphere, the Chinese Arctic Yellow River Station (YRS) equipped with all-sky imagers (ASIs) was situated at the magnetic local noon region (~1210 MLT) in the Northern Hemisphere, while the SuperDARN CUTLASS Finland HF radar covering the field of view (FOV) of the ASIs at YRS had fine ionospheric plasma convection measurement. We observed that an intensified red aurora manifesting as a discrete emission band at a higher latitude responds to the shock impact gradually, which results in a distinct broadening of the dayside auroral oval due to the equatorward shifting of its lower latitude boundary after the shock arrival. In contrast, the green diffuse aurora, manifesting as a relatively uniform luminosity structure, reacts immediately to the shock compression, displaying prompt appearance in the southern edge of the FOV and subsequent poleward propagation of its higher latitude boundary. Simultaneously, the CUTLASS Finland radar monitored enhanced backscatter echo power and increased echo number, which coincided with intensified discrete aurora in approximately the same latitudinal region. Doppler velocity measurement showed moving ionospheric irregularities with generally enhanced line-of-sight (LOS) speed, but with prominent sunward flow in the polar cap and antisunward flow in both the eastern and western regions. The SuperDARN global ionospheric convection pattern clearly presented a large-scale plasma flow divided in four circulation cells, with two reversed flow cells nested in the noon sector of the polar cap. These direct observations strongly suggest that the prompt shock compression intensified the wave-particle interaction in the inner magnetosphere and enhanced the lobe magnetic reconnection rate at magnetospheric high latitude.
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author Jianjun Liu
Hongqiao Hu
Desheng Han
Huigen Yang
Mark Lester
author_facet Jianjun Liu
Hongqiao Hu
Desheng Han
Huigen Yang
Mark Lester
author_sort Jianjun Liu
title Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon
title_short Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon
title_full Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon
title_fullStr Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon
title_full_unstemmed Simultaneous ground-based optical and SuperDARN observations of the shock aurora at MLT noon
title_sort simultaneous ground-based optical and superdarn observations of the shock aurora at mlt noon
publishDate 2015
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Simultaneous_ground-based_optical_and_SuperDARN_observations_of_the_shock_aurora_at_MLT_noon/10150448
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation 2381/32946
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Simultaneous_ground-based_optical_and_SuperDARN_observations_of_the_shock_aurora_at_MLT_noon/10150448
op_rights All Rights Reserved
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