On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm

A -190-nT negative bay in the geomagnetic X component measured at Macquarie Island ( -65° Λ) showed that an ionospheric substorm occurred during 09:58 to 11:10 UT on 27 February 2000. Signatures of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) were observed nearly simultaneously in the backscatter power,...

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Main Authors: Parkinson, M. L., Pinnock, M., Ye, H., Hairston, M. R., Devlin, J. C., Dyson, P. L., Morris, R. J., Ponomarenko, P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: European Geosciences Union 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/27842
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spelling ftunivnewcastnsw:uon:1996 2023-05-15T17:09:59+02:00 On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm Parkinson, M. L. Pinnock, M. Ye, H. Hairston, M. R. Devlin, J. C. Dyson, P. L. Morris, R. J. Ponomarenko, P. 2003 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/27842 eng eng European Geosciences Union Annales Geophysicae: Atmospheres, Hydrospheres and Space Vol. 21, Issue 4, p. 893-913 http://www.ann-geophys.net/21/893/2003 auroral ionosphere electric fields and currents ionosphere-magnetospehere interactions magnetospheric physics storms and substorms journal article 2003 ftunivnewcastnsw 2018-07-27T00:26:29Z A -190-nT negative bay in the geomagnetic X component measured at Macquarie Island ( -65° Λ) showed that an ionospheric substorm occurred during 09:58 to 11:10 UT on 27 February 2000. Signatures of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) were observed nearly simultaneously in the backscatter power, LOS Doppler velocity, and Doppler spectral width measured using the Tasman International Geospace Environment Radar (TIGER), a Southern Hemisphere HF SuperDARN radar. Many of the characteristics of the AWFC were similar to those occurring during a polarisation jet (PJ), or subauroral ion drift (SAID) event, and suggest that it may have been a pre-cursor to a fully developed, intense westward flow channel satisfying all of the criteria defining a PJ/SAID. A beam-swinging analysis showed that the westward drifts (poleward electric field) associated with the flow channel were very structured in time and space, but the smoothed velocities grew to ~ 800 ms⁻¹ (47 mVm⁻¹) during the 22-min substorm onset interval 09:56 to 10:18 UT. Maximum west-ward drifts of >1.3 km s⁻¹ (>77 mVm⁻¹) occurred during a ~ 5-min velocity spike, peaking at 10:40 UT during the expansion phase. The drifts decayed rapidly to ~ 300 ms⁻¹ (18 mVm⁻¹) during the 6-min recovery phase interval, 11:04 to 11:10 UT. Overall, the AWFC had a lifetime of 74 min, and was located near -65° Λ in the evening sector west of the Harang discontinuity. The large westward drifts were confined to a geographic zonal channel of longitudinal ex-tent >20° (>1.3 h magnetic local time), and latitudinal width ~2° Λ. Using a half-width of ~ 100 km in latitude, the peak electric potential was >7.7 kV. However, a transient velocity of >3.1 km s⁻¹ with potential >18.4 kV was observed further poleward at the end of the recovery phase. Auroral oval boundaries determined using DMSP measurements suggest the main flow channel overlapped the equatorward boundary of the diffuse auroral oval. During the ~ 2-h interval following the flow channel, an ~ 3° Λ wide band of scatter was observed drifting slowly toward the west, with speeds gradually decaying to ~ 50 ms⁻¹ (3 mVm ⁻¹). The scatter was observed extending past the Harang discontinuity, and had Doppler signatures characteristic of the main ionospheric trough, implicating the flow channel in the further depletion of F-region plasma. The character of this scatter was in contrast with the character of the scatter drifting toward the east at higher latitude. Article in Journal/Newspaper Macquarie Island NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia)
institution Open Polar
collection NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia)
op_collection_id ftunivnewcastnsw
language English
topic auroral ionosphere
electric fields and currents
ionosphere-magnetospehere interactions
magnetospheric physics
storms and substorms
spellingShingle auroral ionosphere
electric fields and currents
ionosphere-magnetospehere interactions
magnetospheric physics
storms and substorms
Parkinson, M. L.
Pinnock, M.
Ye, H.
Hairston, M. R.
Devlin, J. C.
Dyson, P. L.
Morris, R. J.
Ponomarenko, P.
On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm
topic_facet auroral ionosphere
electric fields and currents
ionosphere-magnetospehere interactions
magnetospheric physics
storms and substorms
description A -190-nT negative bay in the geomagnetic X component measured at Macquarie Island ( -65° Λ) showed that an ionospheric substorm occurred during 09:58 to 11:10 UT on 27 February 2000. Signatures of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) were observed nearly simultaneously in the backscatter power, LOS Doppler velocity, and Doppler spectral width measured using the Tasman International Geospace Environment Radar (TIGER), a Southern Hemisphere HF SuperDARN radar. Many of the characteristics of the AWFC were similar to those occurring during a polarisation jet (PJ), or subauroral ion drift (SAID) event, and suggest that it may have been a pre-cursor to a fully developed, intense westward flow channel satisfying all of the criteria defining a PJ/SAID. A beam-swinging analysis showed that the westward drifts (poleward electric field) associated with the flow channel were very structured in time and space, but the smoothed velocities grew to ~ 800 ms⁻¹ (47 mVm⁻¹) during the 22-min substorm onset interval 09:56 to 10:18 UT. Maximum west-ward drifts of >1.3 km s⁻¹ (>77 mVm⁻¹) occurred during a ~ 5-min velocity spike, peaking at 10:40 UT during the expansion phase. The drifts decayed rapidly to ~ 300 ms⁻¹ (18 mVm⁻¹) during the 6-min recovery phase interval, 11:04 to 11:10 UT. Overall, the AWFC had a lifetime of 74 min, and was located near -65° Λ in the evening sector west of the Harang discontinuity. The large westward drifts were confined to a geographic zonal channel of longitudinal ex-tent >20° (>1.3 h magnetic local time), and latitudinal width ~2° Λ. Using a half-width of ~ 100 km in latitude, the peak electric potential was >7.7 kV. However, a transient velocity of >3.1 km s⁻¹ with potential >18.4 kV was observed further poleward at the end of the recovery phase. Auroral oval boundaries determined using DMSP measurements suggest the main flow channel overlapped the equatorward boundary of the diffuse auroral oval. During the ~ 2-h interval following the flow channel, an ~ 3° Λ wide band of scatter was observed drifting slowly toward the west, with speeds gradually decaying to ~ 50 ms⁻¹ (3 mVm ⁻¹). The scatter was observed extending past the Harang discontinuity, and had Doppler signatures characteristic of the main ionospheric trough, implicating the flow channel in the further depletion of F-region plasma. The character of this scatter was in contrast with the character of the scatter drifting toward the east at higher latitude.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Parkinson, M. L.
Pinnock, M.
Ye, H.
Hairston, M. R.
Devlin, J. C.
Dyson, P. L.
Morris, R. J.
Ponomarenko, P.
author_facet Parkinson, M. L.
Pinnock, M.
Ye, H.
Hairston, M. R.
Devlin, J. C.
Dyson, P. L.
Morris, R. J.
Ponomarenko, P.
author_sort Parkinson, M. L.
title On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm
title_short On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm
title_full On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm
title_fullStr On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm
title_full_unstemmed On the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (AWFC) observed during a magnetospheric substorm
title_sort on the lifetime and extent of an auroral westward flow channel (awfc) observed during a magnetospheric substorm
publisher European Geosciences Union
publishDate 2003
url http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/27842
genre Macquarie Island
genre_facet Macquarie Island
op_relation Annales Geophysicae: Atmospheres, Hydrospheres and Space Vol. 21, Issue 4, p. 893-913
http://www.ann-geophys.net/21/893/2003
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