Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case

We investigate the association between temporal-spatial structure of polar cap convection and auroral electrojet intensifications during a 5-h-long interval of strong forcing of the magnetosphere by an ICME/Magnetic cloud on 20 March 2001. We use data from coordinated ground-satellite observations i...

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Main Authors: Andalsvik, Y. L., Sandholt, P. E., Farrugia, Charlie J.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository 2011
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Online Access:https://scholars.unh.edu/cmerg/178
https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1177&context=cmerg
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spelling ftuninhampshire:oai:scholars.unh.edu:cmerg-1177 2023-05-15T18:29:52+02:00 Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case Andalsvik, Y. L. Sandholt, P. E. Farrugia, Charlie J. 2011-11-29T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholars.unh.edu/cmerg/178 https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1177&context=cmerg unknown University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository https://scholars.unh.edu/cmerg/178 https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1177&context=cmerg http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ CC-BY Coronal Mass Ejection Research Group text 2011 ftuninhampshire 2023-01-30T22:05:14Z We investigate the association between temporal-spatial structure of polar cap convection and auroral electrojet intensifications during a 5-h-long interval of strong forcing of the magnetosphere by an ICME/Magnetic cloud on 20 March 2001. We use data from coordinated ground-satellite observations in the 15:00–20:00 MLT sector. We take advantage of the good latitudinal coverage in the polar cap and in the auroral zone of the IMAGE chain of ground magnetometers in Svalbard – Scandinavia – Russia and the stable magnetic field conditions in ICMEs. The electrojet events are characterized by a sequence of 10 min-long AL excursions to −1000/−1500 nT followed by poleward expansions and auroral streamers. These events are superimposed on a high disturbance level when the AL index remains around −500 nT for several hours. These signatures are different from those appearing in classical substorms, most notably the absence of a complete recovery phase when AL usually reaches above −100 nT. We concentrate on polar cap convection in both hemispheres (DMSP F13 data) in relation to the ICME By conditions, electrojet intensifications, and the global UV auroral configuration obtained from the IMAGE spacecraft. The temporal evolution of convection properties such as the cross-polar cap potential (CPCP) drop and flow channels at the dawn/dusk polar cap (PC) boundaries around the time of the electrojet events are investigated. This approach allows us to distinguish between dayside (magnetopause reconnection) and nightside (magnetotail reconnection) sources of the PC convection events within the context of the expanding-contracting model of high-latitude convection in the Dungey cycle. Inter-hemispheric symmetries/asymmetries in the presence of newly-discovered convection channels at the dawn or dusk side PC boundaries are determined. Text Svalbard University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
op_collection_id ftuninhampshire
language unknown
description We investigate the association between temporal-spatial structure of polar cap convection and auroral electrojet intensifications during a 5-h-long interval of strong forcing of the magnetosphere by an ICME/Magnetic cloud on 20 March 2001. We use data from coordinated ground-satellite observations in the 15:00–20:00 MLT sector. We take advantage of the good latitudinal coverage in the polar cap and in the auroral zone of the IMAGE chain of ground magnetometers in Svalbard – Scandinavia – Russia and the stable magnetic field conditions in ICMEs. The electrojet events are characterized by a sequence of 10 min-long AL excursions to −1000/−1500 nT followed by poleward expansions and auroral streamers. These events are superimposed on a high disturbance level when the AL index remains around −500 nT for several hours. These signatures are different from those appearing in classical substorms, most notably the absence of a complete recovery phase when AL usually reaches above −100 nT. We concentrate on polar cap convection in both hemispheres (DMSP F13 data) in relation to the ICME By conditions, electrojet intensifications, and the global UV auroral configuration obtained from the IMAGE spacecraft. The temporal evolution of convection properties such as the cross-polar cap potential (CPCP) drop and flow channels at the dawn/dusk polar cap (PC) boundaries around the time of the electrojet events are investigated. This approach allows us to distinguish between dayside (magnetopause reconnection) and nightside (magnetotail reconnection) sources of the PC convection events within the context of the expanding-contracting model of high-latitude convection in the Dungey cycle. Inter-hemispheric symmetries/asymmetries in the presence of newly-discovered convection channels at the dawn or dusk side PC boundaries are determined.
format Text
author Andalsvik, Y. L.
Sandholt, P. E.
Farrugia, Charlie J.
spellingShingle Andalsvik, Y. L.
Sandholt, P. E.
Farrugia, Charlie J.
Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case
author_facet Andalsvik, Y. L.
Sandholt, P. E.
Farrugia, Charlie J.
author_sort Andalsvik, Y. L.
title Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case
title_short Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case
title_full Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case
title_fullStr Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case
title_full_unstemmed Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 March 2001 ICME case
title_sort dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: the 20 march 2001 icme case
publisher University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository
publishDate 2011
url https://scholars.unh.edu/cmerg/178
https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1177&context=cmerg
geographic Svalbard
geographic_facet Svalbard
genre Svalbard
genre_facet Svalbard
op_source Coronal Mass Ejection Research Group
op_relation https://scholars.unh.edu/cmerg/178
https://scholars.unh.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1177&context=cmerg
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
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