Abstract

We explore the relationship between mid‐latitude and synchronous orbit magnetic signatures and the location of the auroral surge at the onset of three isolated magnetospheric substorms. Mid‐latitude data come from the Air Force Geophysics Laboratory Magnetometer Network, synchronous orbit data from the satellites GOES 2 and 3, and auroral data from Defense Meteorological Satellite Program auroral images and auroral magnetograms. We find that the surge forms with its western edge ∼1 hour west of the longitude where the major axis of the mid‐latitude Pi 2 polarization ellipse is along magnetic north and where the D component perturbation of the magnetic bay is near zero. These observations are in qualitative agreement with a current wedge consisting of a localized upward current in the west and a longitudinally distributed current in the east. At synchronous orbit the longitude of the surge head appears to separate a region to the west where the magnetic field becomes more taillike from one to the east where the magnetic field becomes more dipolar.

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