Abstract

Ground-based and spacecraft observations of polar cap geophysical phenomena during periods of northward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) show specific patterns of electric fields, field-aligned currents, aurora and particle precipitation. These are basically different from those when the IMF is southward. The total combination of observational data for northward IMF indicates rather a closed magnetosphere. This topology has led to the formation of a specific convection pattern in the distant plasma sheet. As different theoretical studies show, the connection of the IMF to geomagnetic flux tubes poleward of the cusp region may serve as the driving mechanism for plasma sheet convection and as the dynamo of current systems. Unfortunately, the direct observations of processes in the distant magnetosphere are too scarce either to accept or reject the concept of a closed magnetosphere. There are also some experimental data that are inconsistent with the closed magnetosphere topology. Definitive open or closed models must await future measurements.

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