Abstract The weakly ionized plasma in the Earth's ionosphere is controlled by a complex interplay between solar and magnetospheric inputs from above, atmospheric processes from below, and plasma electrodynamics from within. This interaction results in ionosphere structuring and variability that pose major challenges for accurate ionosphere prediction for global navigation satellite system (GNSS) related applications and space weather research. The ionospheric structuring and variability are often probed using the total electron content (TEC) and its relative perturbations (dTEC). Among dTEC variations observed at high latitudes, a unique modulation pattern has been linked to magnetospheric ultra‐low‐frequency (ULF) waves, yet its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here using magnetically conjugate observations from the THEMIS spacecraft and a ground‐based GPS receiver at Fairbanks, Alaska, we provide direct evidence that these dTEC modulations are driven by magnetospheric electron precipitation induced by ULF‐modulated whistler‐mode waves. We observed peak‐to‐peak dTEC amplitudes reaching 0.5 TECU (1 TECU is equal to electrons/) with modulations spanning scales of 5–100 km. The cross‐correlation between our modeled and observed dTEC reached 0.8 during the conjugacy period but decreased outside of it. The spectra of whistler‐mode waves and dTEC also matched closely at ULF frequencies during the conjugacy period but diverged outside of it. Our findings elucidate the high‐latitude dTEC generation from magnetospheric wave‐induced precipitation, addressing a significant gap in current physics‐based dTEC modeling. Theses results thus improve ionospheric dTEC prediction and enhance our understanding of magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling via ULF waves.
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This content will become publicly available on April 23, 2026
Statistical Analysis of Ultra‐Low‐Frequency Total Electron Content Disturbances: Relationship to Magnetospheric Waves
Abstract Disturbances in ionospheric Total Electron Content (dTEC) with frequencies of 1–100 mHz can be driven from above by processes in the magnetosphere and below by processes on the Earth's surface and lower atmosphere. Past studies showed the potential of dTEC as a diagnostic of magnetospheric Ultra Low Frequency (ULF) wave activity and demonstrated that ULF dTEC can impact space weather by, for example, changing ionospheric conductance. However, most past work has focused on single event studies, lacked magnetospheric context, or used sampling rates too low to capture most ULF waves. Here, we perform a statistical study using Time History of Events and Macrsoscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS) satellite conjunctions with a ground‐based magnetometer and Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receiver at 65° magnetic latitude. We find that magnetospheric ULF waves generate dTEC variations across the broad range of frequencies examined in this study (2–50 mHz), and that ULF dTEC wave power is correlated with Kp, AE, solar wind speed, and magnetic field wave power observed in the magnetosphere and on the ground. We further find that magnetospheric ULF waves generate dTEC amplitudes up to TECU ( background), with the largest amplitudes occurring during geomagnetically active conditions, at frequencies below 7 mHz, and at local times near midnight. We finally discuss the implications of our results for magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling and remote sensing techniques related to ULF waves.
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- PAR ID:
- 10584483
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
- Volume:
- 130
- Issue:
- 4
- ISSN:
- 2169-9380
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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