The Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI) and its effects relating to the transfer of energy and mass from the solar wind into the magnetosphere remain an important focus of magnetospheric physics. One such effect is the generation of Pc4-Pc5 ultra low frequency (ULF) waves (periods of 45–600 s). On July 3, 2007 at ∼ 0500 magnetic local time the Cluster space mission encountered Pc4 frequency Kelvin-Helmholtz waves (KHWs) at the high latitude magnetopause with signatures of persistent vortices. Such signatures included bipolar fluctuations of the magnetic field normal component associated with a total pressure increase and rapid change in density at vortex edges; oscillations of magnetosheath and magnetospheric plasma populations; existence of fast-moving, low-density, mixed plasma; quasi-periodic oscillations of the boundary normal and an anti-phase relation between the normal and parallel components of the boundary velocity. The event occurred during a period of southward polarity of the interplanetary magnetic field according to the OMNI data and THEMIS observations at the subsolar point. Several of the KHI vortices were associated with reconnection indicated by the Walén relation, the presence of deHoffman-Teller frames, field-aligned ion beams observed together with bipolar fluctuations in the normal magnetic field component, and crescent ion distributions. Global magnetohydrodynamic simulation of the event also resulted in KHWs at the magnetopause. The observed KHWs associated with reconnection coincided with recorded ULF waves at the ground whose properties suggest that they were driven by those waves. Such properties were the location of Cluster’s magnetic foot point, the Pc4 frequency, and the solar wind conditions.
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Suppression of Magnetopause Reconnection in the Presence of Cold Magnetospheric Plasma
Abstract The temporal variability of magnetopause reconnection is an important aspect of solar wind magnetosphere coupling. Even under stable solar wind driving, reconnection can be triggered, modulated, or suppressed because of magnetic field and plasma conditions near the magnetopause boundary. We analyze a unique event in which a THEMIS satellite crosses the subsolar magnetopause three times within a 5 min interval in the presence of a cold‐ion population on the magnetospheric side of the boundary. During the first crossing, the satellite detects reconnection outflow and a D‐ shaped ion velocity distribution earthward from the boundary, indicating an active reconnection. The signatures disappear during the second crossing when the magnetospheric cold‐ion density increases significantly and reappear during the third crossing when the magnetospheric density drops to a level comparable to that of the first crossing. The solar wind and magnetosheath conditions do not change much during the interval. The magnetospheric population is evidently associated with a plasmaspheric plume with considerable variation in density. According to the theory of mass loading, the presence of such a plume population results in the local Alfvén speed at the second crossing being 40% smaller compared to the first and third crossings. However, the theory itself does not suggest suppression. We discuss possible suppression mechanisms considering the additional effects of the prevailing solar wind and local magnetopause conditions.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2025570
- PAR ID:
- 10640560
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Geophysical Union
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Earth and Space Science
- Volume:
- 12
- Issue:
- 9
- ISSN:
- 2333-5084
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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