Abstract

Abstract. The quantification of wave polarization characteristics of ULF waves from the geomagnetic field variations is done under ‘a priori’ assumption that fields of internal induced currents are in-phase with the external inducing fields. Such approximation is invalidated in the regions marked by large lateral conductivity variations that perturb the flow pattern of induced currents. The amplitude and phase changes that these perturbations produce, in the resultant fields at the Earth’s surface, make determination of polarization and phase of the oscillating external signals problematic. In this paper, with the help of a classical Pc5 magnetic pulsation event of 24 March 1991, recorded by dense network of magnetometers in the equatorial belt of Brazil, we document the nature and extent of the possible influence of anomalous induction effects in the wave polarization of ULF waves. The presence of anomalous induction effects at selected sites lead to an over estimation of the equatorial enhancement at pulsation period and also suggest changes in the azimuth of ULF waves as they propagate through the equatorial electrojet. Through numerical calculations, it is shown that anomalous horizontal fields, that result from induction in the lateral conductivity distribution in the study region, vary in magnitude and phase with the polarization of external source field. Essentially, the induction response is also a function of the period of external inducing source field. It is further shown that when anomalous induction fields corresponding to the magnitude and polarization of the 24 March 1991 pulsation event are eliminated from observed fields, corrected amplitude in the X and Y horizontal components allows for true characterisation of ULF wave parameters.Key words. Geomagnetism and paleomagnetism (geomagnetic induction) – Ionosphere (equatorial ionosphere) – Magnetospheric physics (magnetosphere-ionosphere interactions)

Highlights

  • Magnetic pulsations as recorded by a network of magnetometers are useful tools to investigate the complex magne-tospheric processes, in general, and to understand the generation and propagation mechanisms of ULF waves, in particular (Hughes, 1994)

  • In the absence of lateral variations in internal conductivity, the internal currents are the mirror images of the external source current systems and, as such, their magnetic effects in the horizontal (X and Y ) field components are in-phase with the inducing source fields

  • The isolation and interpretation of the frequency dependent anomalous fields are the subject matter of Geomagnetic Deep Sounding (GDS) that is aimed at mapping the conductivity structures of the Earth’s crust and upper mantle (Gough and Ingham, 1983; Arora, 1997)

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Summary

Introduction

Arora et al.: Appraisal of electromagnetic induction effects on magnetic pulsation studies. Array of magnetometers in the equatorial region of the N-NE Brazil. Given this observational evidence, useful guidelines to estimate the extent of induction effects are briefly outlined

Pc5 magnetic pulsations of 24 March 1991
Physical appraisal of induction effects
Estimation and elimination of the induction effects
Concluding remarks
Full Text
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