Abstract

Abstract. Using data from the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF and CUTLASS (Co-operative UK Twin-Located Auroral Sounding System) HF radars, we study the formation of ionospheric polar cap patches and their relationship to the magnetopause reconnection pulses identified in the companion paper by Lockwood et al. (2005). It is shown that the poleward-moving, high-concentration plasma patches observed in the ionosphere by EISCAT on 23 November 1999, as reported by Davies et al. (2002), were often associated with corresponding reconnection rate pulses. However, not all such pulses generated a patch and only within a limited MLT range (11:00-12:00 MLT) did a patch result from a reconnection pulse. Three proposed mechanisms for the production of patches, and of the concentration minima that separate them, are analysed and evaluated: (1) concentration enhancement within the patches by cusp/cleft precipitation; (2) plasma depletion in the minima between the patches by fast plasma flows; and (3) intermittent injection of photoionisation-enhanced plasma into the polar cap. We devise a test to distinguish between the effects of these mechanisms. Some of the events repeat too frequently to apply the test. Others have sufficiently long repeat periods and mechanism (3) is shown to be the only explanation of three of the longer-lived patches seen on this day. However, effect (2) also appears to contribute to some events. We conclude that plasma concentration gradients on the edges of the larger patches arise mainly from local time variations in the subauroral plasma, via the mechanism proposed by Lockwood et al. (2000).

Highlights

  • In a companion paper, hereafter referred to as Paper I, Lockwood et al (2005) studied motions of the open-closed field line boundary (OCB) during two substorm cycles on 23 November 1999

  • From detailed analysis of the flows observed by the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF radar, the reconnection rate was shown to be pulsed when the IMF was steadily southward and EISCAT was within the inferred merging gap

  • Pulses in the inferred reconnection rate have been shown to be associated with synchronous flow enhancements along the OCB and consequent ion temperature enhancements, and the production of poleward-moving events and polar cap patches

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Summary

Introduction

Hereafter referred to as Paper I, Lockwood et al (2005) studied motions of the open-closed field line boundary (OCB) during two substorm cycles on 23 November 1999. From detailed analysis of the flows observed by the EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter) VHF radar, the reconnection rate was shown to be pulsed when the IMF was steadily southward and EISCAT was within the inferred merging gap (the ionospheric footprint of the magnetopause reconnection X-line). From both the EISCAT data and the DMSP (Defense Meteorological Satellite Program) spacecraft passes, Lockwood et al (2005) found the merging gap extent to be of order 09:30–15:30 MLT (which EISCAT beam 1 observed in the interval 06:45–12:45 UT). We analyse the association of the reconnection rate pulses with the formation of the patches and investigate the mechanism by which the patches are formed

Polar cap patches
In-situ effects in the cusp
Observations
EISCAT plasma concentration observations
EISCAT plasma flow observations
EISCAT plasma temperature observations
Analysis of patch formation mechanisms
Patch enhancement by magnetosheath precipitation
Patch separation by high plasma flow channel
Conclusions
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