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Transpolar voltage and polar cap flux during the substorm cycle and steady convection events

Transpolar voltage and polar cap flux during the substorm cycle and steady convection events
Transpolar voltage and polar cap flux during the substorm cycle and steady convection events
Transpolar voltages observed during traversals of the polar cap by the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) F-13 spacecraft during 2001 are analyzed using the expanding-contracting polar cap model of ionospheric convection. Each of the 10,216 passes is classified by its substorm phase or as a steady convection event (SCE) by inspection of the AE indices. For all phases, we detect a contribution to the transpolar voltage by reconnection in both the dayside magnetopause and in the cross-tail current sheet. Detection of the IMF influence is 97% certain during quiet intervals and >99% certain during substorm/SCE growth phases but falls to 75% in substorm expansion phases: It is only 27% during SCEs. Detection of the influence of the nightside voltage is only 19% certain during growth phases, rising during expansion phases to a peak of 96% in recovery phases: During SCEs, it is >99%. The voltage during SCEs is dominated by the nightside, not the dayside, reconnection. On average, substorm expansion phases halt the growth phase rise in polar cap flux rather than reversing it. The main destruction of the excess open flux takes place during the 6- to 10-hour interval after the recovery phase (as seen in AE) and at a rate which is relatively independent of polar cap flux because the NENL has by then retreated to the far tail. The best estimate of the voltage associated with viscous-like transfer of closed field lines into the tail is around 10 kV.
0148-0227
A01210
Lockwood, Michael
a53d2166-6d02-4b6e-a9df-38afd8fdb837
Hairston, Marc
a2e1a9d0-01b8-47ee-a7ba-9626fc84c747
Finch, Ivan
c6ad5452-b7b7-418f-b0e7-9092bab81f1d
Rouillard, Alexis
51110ede-35fd-483b-ab4d-ee0e89ac6ce8
Lockwood, Michael
a53d2166-6d02-4b6e-a9df-38afd8fdb837
Hairston, Marc
a2e1a9d0-01b8-47ee-a7ba-9626fc84c747
Finch, Ivan
c6ad5452-b7b7-418f-b0e7-9092bab81f1d
Rouillard, Alexis
51110ede-35fd-483b-ab4d-ee0e89ac6ce8

Lockwood, Michael, Hairston, Marc, Finch, Ivan and Rouillard, Alexis (2009) Transpolar voltage and polar cap flux during the substorm cycle and steady convection events. Journal of Geophysical Research, 114 (A1), A01210. (doi:10.1029/2008JA013697).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Transpolar voltages observed during traversals of the polar cap by the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) F-13 spacecraft during 2001 are analyzed using the expanding-contracting polar cap model of ionospheric convection. Each of the 10,216 passes is classified by its substorm phase or as a steady convection event (SCE) by inspection of the AE indices. For all phases, we detect a contribution to the transpolar voltage by reconnection in both the dayside magnetopause and in the cross-tail current sheet. Detection of the IMF influence is 97% certain during quiet intervals and >99% certain during substorm/SCE growth phases but falls to 75% in substorm expansion phases: It is only 27% during SCEs. Detection of the influence of the nightside voltage is only 19% certain during growth phases, rising during expansion phases to a peak of 96% in recovery phases: During SCEs, it is >99%. The voltage during SCEs is dominated by the nightside, not the dayside, reconnection. On average, substorm expansion phases halt the growth phase rise in polar cap flux rather than reversing it. The main destruction of the excess open flux takes place during the 6- to 10-hour interval after the recovery phase (as seen in AE) and at a rate which is relatively independent of polar cap flux because the NENL has by then retreated to the far tail. The best estimate of the voltage associated with viscous-like transfer of closed field lines into the tail is around 10 kV.

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Published date: 20 January 2009

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Local EPrints ID: 146837
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/146837
ISSN: 0148-0227
PURE UUID: eca5df6e-1bae-43f6-ae26-a1b96b126d1e

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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2010 14:16
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 00:56

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Contributors

Author: Michael Lockwood
Author: Marc Hairston
Author: Ivan Finch
Author: Alexis Rouillard

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