Abstract

AbstractWe have developed a new global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model for Jupiter's magnetosphere based on the BATSRUS code and an ionospheric electrodynamics solver. Our model includes the Io plasma torus at its appropriate location and couples the global magnetosphere with the planetary ionosphere through field‐aligned currents. Through comparisons with available particle and field observations as well as empirical models, we show that the model captures the overall configuration of the magnetosphere reasonably well. In order to understand how the magnetosphere responds to different solar wind drivers, we have carried out time‐dependent simulations using various kinds of upstream conditions, such as a forward shock and a rotation in the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF). Our model predicts that compression of the magnetosphere by a forward shock of typical strength generally weakens the corotation enforcement currents on the dayside and produces an enhancement on the nightside. However, the global response varies depending on the IMF orientation. A forward shock with a typical Parker‐spiral IMF configuration has a larger impact on the magnetospheric configuration and large‐scale current systems than with a parallel IMF configuration. Plasmoids are found to form in the simulation due to tail reconnection and have complex magnetic topology, as they evolve and propagate down tail. For a fixed mass input rate in the Io plasma torus, the frequency of plasmoid occurrence in our simulation is found to vary depending on the upstream solar wind driving.

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