Abstract

Abstract. We use multi-satellite and ground-based magnetic data to investigate the concurrent characteristics of Pc3 (22–100 mHz) and Pc4-5 (1–22 mHz) ultra-low-frequency (ULF) waves on the 31 October 2003 during the Halloween magnetic superstorm. ULF waves are seen in the Earth's magnetosphere, topside ionosphere, and Earth's surface, enabling an examination of their propagation characteristics. We employ a time–frequency analysis technique and examine data from when the Cluster and CHAMP spacecraft were in good local time (LT) conjunction near the dayside noon–midnight meridian. We find clear evidence of the excitation of both Pc3 and Pc4-5 waves, but more significantly we find a clear separation in the L shell of occurrence of the Pc4-5 and Pc3 waves in the equatorial inner magnetosphere, separated by the density gradients at the plasmapause boundary layer. A key finding of the wavelet spectral analysis of data collected from the Geotail, Cluster, and CHAMP spacecraft and the CARISMA and GIMA magnetometer networks was a remarkably clear transition of the waves' frequency into dominance in a higher-frequency regime within the Pc3 range. Analysis of the local field line resonance frequency suggests that the separation of the Pc4-5 and Pc3 emissions across the plasmapause is consistent with the structure of the inhomogeneous field line resonance Alfvén continuum. The Pc4-5 waves are consistent with direct excitation by the solar wind in the plasma trough, as well as Pc3 wave absorption in the plasmasphere following excitation by upstream waves originating at the bow shock in the local noon sector. However, despite good solar wind coverage, our study was not able to unambiguously identify a clear explanation for the sharp universal time (UT) onset of the discrete frequency and large-amplitude Pc3 wave power.

Highlights

  • Ultra-low-frequency (ULF) plasma waves are large-scale phenomena whose wavelength can be comparable to the size of the Earth’s magnetosphere

  • We examine Geotail data to look for evidence of the disturbances in its location which might have been driven by upstream waves as a result of ion specular reflection at the bow shock (e.g. Greenstadt and Olson, 1976) and which could have excited waves at Cluster and www.ann-geophys.net/33/1237/2015/

  • In order to examine the nature of the Pc3 power observed by CHAMP, and to seek periods of Pc3 ULF wave activity in this data set, we identified ground stations with locations corresponding to the magnetic footprint of Cluster-1 between 19:00 and 23:30 universal time (UT) on 31 October 2003 (Fig. 5; the dashed line shows the meridian of local noon at 22:15 UT)

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Summary

Introduction

Ultra-low-frequency (ULF) plasma waves are large-scale phenomena whose wavelength can be comparable to the size of the Earth’s magnetosphere.

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