Abstract

Measurements from six longitudinally separated magnetic observatories, all located close to the 53° mid-latitude contour, are analysed. We focus on the large geomagnetic disturbance that occurred during 7 and 8 September 2017. Combined with available geomagnetically induced current (GIC) data from two substations, each located near to a magnetic observatory, we investigate the magnetospheric drivers of the largest events. We analyse solar wind parameters combined with auroral electrojet indices to investigate the driving mechanisms. Six magnetic field disturbance events were observed at mid-latitudes with dH/dt > 60 nT/min. Co-located GIC measurements identified transformer currents >15 A during three of the events. The initial event was caused by a solar wind pressure pulse causing largest effects on the dayside, consistent with the rapid compression of the dayside geomagnetic field. Four of the events were caused by substorms. Variations in the Magnetic Local Time of the maximum effect of each substorm-driven event were apparent, with magnetic midnight, morning-side, and dusk-side events all occurring. The six events occurred over a period of almost 24 h, during which the solar wind remained elevated at >700 km s−1, indicating an extended time scale for potential GIC problems in electrical power networks following a sudden storm commencement. This work demonstrates the challenge of understanding the causes of ground-level magnetic field changes (and hence GIC magnitudes) for the global power industry. It also demonstrates the importance of magnetic local time and differing inner magnetospheric processes when considering the global hazard posed by GIC to power grids.

Highlights

  • Large geomagnetic storms have the potential to create disruptive geomagnetically induced currents (GIC) in mid-latitude conducting networks such as high voltage power transmission systems (Thomson et al, 2011; Clilverd et al, 2020), and gas pipelines (Ingham & Rodger, 2018)

  • Disturbance Polar 2 (DP2) is characterized by its two cell spatial structure with maximum dH/dt affects occurring towards the magnetic local time (MLT) dusk-side and morning-side as a result of the modification of large magnetic fields by mesoscale turbulent structure (Freeman et al, 2019)

  • The characteristics of Interval 2 are consistent with a series of loading-unloading/substorm events with solar wind influence primarily confined to a steady enhancement of background levels of DP2 convection electrojet activity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Large geomagnetic storms have the potential to create disruptive geomagnetically induced currents (GIC) in mid-latitude conducting networks such as high voltage power transmission systems (Thomson et al, 2011; Clilverd et al, 2020), and gas pipelines (Ingham & Rodger, 2018). DP2 is characterized by its two cell spatial structure with maximum dH/dt affects occurring towards the magnetic local time (MLT) dusk-side and morning-side as a result of the modification of large magnetic fields by mesoscale turbulent structure (Freeman et al, 2019) Given these two influences on the occurrence of extreme dH/dt (and potential GIC levels) we set out to determine which has most mid-latitude impact during a large geomagnetic storm event.

Experimental datasets
Magnetometers
GIC observations
SuperMAG observations
Interval 1
Interval 2
Peak magnetic local times
Geomagnetically induced currents
Solar wind versus magnetospheric drivers
Identifying substorm occurrence during the 7–8 September 2017 storm period
Summary
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.