skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: On the Relationship Between Regions of Large‐Scale Field‐Aligned Currents and Regions of Plateau in Plasma Pressure Observed in the Equatorial Plane of the Earth's Magnetosphere
Abstract Since the discovery of the large‐scale field‐aligned currents it is widely acknowledged that gaps exist between the Region 1 (R1) and Region 2 (R2) currents in which the current values are relatively small as compared to neighboring regions. Assuming that the field‐aligned currents are generated by plasma pressure gradients, we analyzed data collected by the THEMIS satellites between 2007 and 2011 to identify regions with very low plasma pressure gradients (pressure plateaus), which could be responsible for the appearance of these gaps. It was found that the pressure profiles with low radial gradients are typically located between 8 and 10 Radii around the Earth. Projections of pressure plateau regions onto ionospheric altitudes, for both individual events and on a statistical basis, coincide with the locations of gaps between Iijima and Potemra field‐aligned currents. The role played by identified pressure plateaus in shaping the pattern of large‐scale field‐aligned currents is discussed.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2002574
PAR ID:
10532387
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ;
Publisher / Repository:
AGU
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Geophysical Research Letters
Volume:
50
Issue:
18
ISSN:
0094-8276
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract We present the observations of field‐aligned currents and the equatorial electrojet during the 23 March 2023 magnetic storm, focusing on the effect of the drastic decrease of the solar wind dynamic pressure occurred during the main phase. Our observations show that the negative pressure pulse had significant impact to the magnetosphere‐ionosphere system. It weakened large‐scale field‐aligned currents and paused the progression of the storm main phase for ∼3 hr. Due to the sudden decrease of the plasma convection after the negative pressure pulse, the low‐latitude ionosphere was over‐shielded and experienced a brief period of westward penetration electric field, which reversed the direction of the equatorial electrojet. The counter electrojet was observed both in space and on the ground. A transient, localized enhancement of downward field‐aligned current was observed near dawn, consistent with the mechanism for transmitting MHD disturbances from magnetosphere to the ionosphere after the negative pressure pulse. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract Observations show that magnetic pulsations with frequencies around 1 mHz are frequently detected simultaneously at different latitudes on the ground, in the inner magnetosphere, and in the solar wind. The coupling between oscillations in the dynamic pressure or magnetic field carried by the solar wind and the ultra‐low frequency (ULF) waves detected on the ground at high latitudes has been suggested in several studies. We present results from a numerical study of ultra‐low‐frequency waves detected by the ground magnetometers at middle latitudes during substorm. We investigate the hypothesis that these waves are generated by the ionospheric feedback instability driven by the large‐scale electric field in the ionosphere. This field is associated with the surface waves propagating along the ambient magnetic field on a strong perpendicular gradient in the plasma density occurring in the equatorial magnetosphere. The gradient in the plasma density is associated with the plasmapause. The plasmapause moves to the middle latitude when the plasmasphere erodes during substorm. The energy from the external driver can be coupled to the large‐scale surface Alfvén waves traveling along the field lines into the ionosphere and generating small‐scale intense ULF waves and field‐aligned currents at middle latitudes. The simulations of the two‐fluid magnetohydrodynamics model confirm this scenario, and the numerical results show a good quantitative agreement with the observations. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract Polar cap ionospheric plasma flow studies often focus on large‐scale averaged properties and neglect the mesoscale component. However, recent studies have shown that mesoscale flows are often found to be collocated with airglow patches. These mesoscale flows are typically a few hundred meters per second faster than the large‐scale background and are associated with major auroral intensifications when they reach the poleward boundary of the nightside auroral oval. Patches often also contain ionospheric signatures of enhanced field‐aligned currents and localized electron flux enhancements, indicating that patches are associated with magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling on open field lines. However, magnetospheric measurements of this coupling are lacking, and it has not been understood what the magnetospheric signatures of patches on open field lines are. The work presented here explores the magnetospheric counterpart of patches and the role these structures have in plasma transport across the open field‐line region in the magnetosphere. Using red‐line emission measurements from the Resolute Bay Optical Mesosphere Thermosphere Imager, and magnetospheric measurements made by the Cluster spacecraft, conjugate events from 2005 to 2009 show that lobe measurements on field lines connected to patches display (1) electric field enhancements, (2) Region 1 sense field‐aligned currents, (3) field‐aligned enhancements in soft electron flux, (4) downward Poynting fluxes, and (5) in some cases enhancements in ion flux, including ion outflows. These observations indicate that patches highlight a localized fast flow channel system that is driven by the magnetosphere and propagates from the dayside to the nightside, most likely being initiated by enhanced localized dayside reconnection. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Low‐altitude observations of magnetospheric particles provide a unique opportunity for remote probing of the magnetospheric and plasma states during active times. We present the first statistical analysis of a specific pattern in such observations, energetic electron flux dropouts in the low‐altitude projection of the plasma sheet. Using 3.5 years of data from the ELFIN CubeSats we report the occurrence distribution of 145 energetic electron flux dropout events and identify characteristics, including their prevalence in the dusk and premidnight sectors, their association with substorms and enhanced auroral activities, and their correlation with the region‐1 (R1) field‐aligned current region. We also investigate three representative dropout events which benefit from satellite conjunctions between ELFIN, GOES, and THEMIS, to better understand the magnetospheric drivers and magnetic field conditions that lead to such dropouts as viewed by ELFIN. One class of dropouts may be associated with magnetic field mapping distortions due to local enhancements and thinning of cross‐tail current sheets and amplification of R1 field‐aligned currents. The other class may be associated with the increase in perpendicular anisotropy of magnetospheric electrons due to magnetic field dipolarizations near premidnight. These plasma sheet flux dropouts at ELFIN provide a valuable tool for refining magnetospheric models, thereby improving the accuracy of field‐line mapping during substorms. 
    more » « less
  5. Abstract We present JWST-NIRCam narrowband, 4.05μm Brαimages of the Sgr C Hiiregion, located in the central molecular zone (CMZ) of the Galaxy. Unlike any Hiiregion in the solar vicinity, the Sgr C plasma is dominated by filamentary structure in both Brαand the radio continuum. Some bright filaments, which form a fractured arc with a radius of about 1.85 pc centered on the Sgr C star-forming molecular clump, likely trace ionization fronts. The brightest filaments form a “π-shaped” structure in the center of the Hiiregion. Fainter filaments radiate away from the surface of the Sgr C molecular cloud. The filaments are emitting optically thin free–free emission, as revealed by spectral index measurements from 1.28 GHz (MeerKAT) to 97 GHz (Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array). But, the negative in-band 1 to 2 GHz spectral index in the MeerKAT data alone reveals the presence of a nonthermal component across the entire Sgr C Hiiregion. We argue that the plasma flow in Sgr C is controlled by magnetic fields, which confine the plasma to ropelike filaments or sheets. This results in the measured nonthermal component of low-frequency radio emission plasma, as well as a plasmaβ(thermal pressure divided by magnetic pressure) below 1, even in the densest regions. We speculate that all mature Hiiregions in the CMZ, and galactic nuclei in general, evolve in a magnetically dominated, low plasmaβregime. 
    more » « less