Abstract

AbstractIn this study we further investigate the development of abnormal subauroral ion drifts/polarization streams (ASAID/ASAPS) during the magnetically quiet days of 9–10 October 2003. Our main aim is to provide direct observational evidence verifying that the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program F15 detected quiet‐time ASAID/ASAPS features developed due to the formation of a magnetospheric cold plasma ripple‐hot ring current interface. By utilizing multisatellite and multi‐instrument Cluster_C2, Polar, and Defense Meteorological Satellite Program observations, we investigate plasma rippling and Pi2 pulsation events. In good agreement with the associated empirical scenario of plasma sheet rippling, we demonstrate with various C2 and Polar events the following observational results. (1) The rippling of the plasma sheet's inner edge was related to the process of cross‐tail current disruption and its earthward propagation. (2) The Pi2 pulsation of the cross‐tail EY field reversed the local convection flow when EY was dawnward directed and thus caused plasma ripples while (3) energy was provided by the earthward flows' braking/deceleration. (4) The ASAID/ASAPS feature's underlying EY is antisunward (or dawnward) and EZ is inward (or earthward). By tracking the cross‐tail current disruptions' tailward (by Cluster_C2) and earthward (by Polar) propagations, almost simultaneously, our results demonstrate also that the convection flows' local reversal by the dawnward EY is a common feature of both the tailward and the earthward flows. This study demonstrates also, with multiple plasmapause and EY detections made by Polar, the multiple and mixed occurrences of ASAID and SAID in the plasmasphere's rippled outer edge.

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