Abstract

AbstractThe dawn‐dusk asymmetry of magnetic depression is a characteristic feature of the storm main phase. Recently Ohtani (2021, https://doi.org/10.1029/2021JA029643) reported that its magnitude is correlated with the dawnside westward auroral electrojet (AEJ) intensity, and suggested that the dawnside AEJ intensification is a fundamental process of the stormtime magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling. In this study we observationally address the cause of the dawnside AEJ intensification in terms of four scenarios. That is, the dawnside AEJ intensifies because (a) the external driving of global convection strengthens, (b) solar wind compression enhances energetic electron precipitation, and therefore, ionospheric conductance, through wave‐particle interaction, (c) the substorm current wedge forms in the dawn sector, and (d) energetic electrons injected by nightside substorms drift dawnward, and the subsequent precipitation enhances ionospheric conductance. We find an event that fits each scenario, and therefore, none of these scenarios can be precluded. However, the result of a superposed epoch analysis shows that some causes are more prevalent than others. More specifically, (a) although the enhancement of external driving may precondition the dawnside AEJ intensification, it is rarely the direct cause; (b) external compression probably explains only a small fraction of the events; (c) prior to the dawnside AEJ intensification, the westward AEJ tends to intensify in the midnight sector along with mid‐latitude positive bays, which suggests that the substorm injection of energetic electrons is the most prevalent cause. This last result may also be explained by the dawnside expansion of the substorm current wedge, which, however, is arguably far less common.

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