Abstract

AbstractStudies commonly assumed that variations in ionospheric conductance were insignificant and proposed that vorticities can be a reliable proxy or diagnostic for ionospheric field‐aligned currents (FACs). We propose a complete method for measuring FACs using data from the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network radar and the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program. In our method, the FACs are determined by three terms. The first term is referred to as magnetospheric‐origin FACs, while the second and third terms are known as ionospheric‐origin FACs. This method incorporates height‐integrated conductances based on observational data, thereby addressing the limitation of assuming uniform conductances. Different from previous works, we can calculate FACs at a low altitude of 250 km and obtain high‐resolution measurements within observable areas. Another advantage of this method lies in its ability to directly calculate and analyze the impact of ionospheric vorticity and conductance on FACs. We apply this method to obtain FACs in the Northern Hemisphere from 2010 to 2016 and analyze the distributions of height‐integrated conductances and total FACs. Our analysis reveals that the average FACs clearly exhibit the large‐scale R1 and R2 FAC systems. We conduct statistical analysis on magnetospheric‐origin FACs and ionospheric‐origin FACs. Our findings show that within the auroral oval, ionospheric‐origin FACs reach a comparable level to magnetospheric‐origin FACs. However, ionospheric‐origin FACs are significantly minor and almost negligible in other regions. This implies that height‐integrated conductance gradients and vorticities play equally significant roles within the auroral oval, whereas vorticities dominate in other regions.

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