Abstract

Abstract. Using data from the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF radar and DMSP (Defense Meteorological Satellite Program) spacecraft passes, we study the motion of the dayside open-closed field line boundary during two substorm cycles. The satellite data show that the motions of ion and electron temperature boundaries in EISCAT data, as reported by Moen et al. (2004), are not localised around the radar; rather, they reflect motions of the open-closed field line boundary at all MLT throughout the dayside auroral ionosphere. The boundary is shown to erode equatorward when the IMF points southward, consistent with the effect of magnetopause reconnection. During the substorm expansion and recovery phases, the dayside boundary returns poleward, whether the IMF points northward or southward. However, the poleward retreat was much faster during the substorm for which the IMF had returned to northward than for the substorm for which the IMF remained southward - even though the former substorm is much the weaker of the two. These poleward retreats are consistent with the destruction of open flux at the tail current sheet. Application of a new analysis of the peak ion energies at the equatorward edge of the cleft/cusp/mantle dispersion seen by the DMSP satellites identifies the dayside reconnection merging gap to extend in MLT from about 9.5 to 15.5 h for most of the interval. Analysis of the boundary motion, and of the convection velocities seen near the boundary by EISCAT, allows calculation of the reconnection rate (mapped down to the ionosphere) from the flow component normal to the boundary in its own rest frame. This reconnection rate is not, in general, significantly different from zero before 06:45 UT (MLT<9.5 h) - indicating that the X line footprint expands over the EISCAT field-of-view to earlier MLT only occasionally and briefly. Between 06:45 UT and 12:45 UT (9.5<MLT<15.5 h) reconnection is continuously observed by EISCAT, confirming the (large) MLT extent of the reconnection footprint deduced from the DMSP passes. As well as direct control by the IMF on longer timescales, the derived reconnection rate variation shows considerable pulsing on timescales of 2-20 min during periods of steady southward IMF.

Highlights

  • In a previous paper, Moen et al (2004) studied various signatures of the dayside auroral oval, as seen by the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF incoherent scatter radar on 23 November 1999, with a view to evaluating the best identifier of the open-closed field line boundary

  • In an accompanying paper (Lockwood et al, 2005, hereafter referred to as Paper II), we study the association of reconnection rate pulses with the formation of the polar cap patches

  • We have inferred motions of the dayside open-closed field line boundary (OCB) from an unusually persistent band of high ion temperatures (Ti) that was observed by the EISCAT VHF radar on 23 November 1999

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Moen et al (2004) studied various signatures of the dayside auroral oval, as seen by the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF incoherent scatter radar on 23 November 1999, with a view to evaluating the best identifier of the open-closed field line boundary (hereafter referred to as the OCB). We make use of their results to study the behaviour of the OCB during two successive substorm cycles on this day. We analyse the boundary motions in terms of the reconnection rate variations, at the dayside magnetopause and in the tail current sheet. In an accompanying paper (Lockwood et al, 2005, hereafter referred to as Paper II), we study the association of reconnection rate pulses with the formation of the polar cap patches

Predicted open-closed boundary motions during the substorm cycle
Interplanetary monitor data
Polar cap and auroral electrojet response
DMSP particle observations
EISCAT velocity data
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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