Abstract

Abstract. Height profiles of the Cowling conductivity in the electrojet region, estimated using the atmospheric parameters given by the existing models like CIRA or MSIS and measured electron density profiles, consistently show the heights of the electrojet current intensity peak to be more than 3 km below those estimated from in-situ measurements using magnetometers on board sounding rockets. Kulkarni and Muralikrishna (2005) attempted to explain this to be due to the effect of neutral dust particles. They reported that neutral dust particles, when they exist in sufficient numbers, can modify the collision parameters, especially in the lower E-region, where dust particles of meteoric origin are known to exist in large numbers, and thereby can modify the Cowling conductivity profile in the electrojet region. This work is extended here to include the effect of charged dust particles. Dust particles can become charged negatively by the attachment of ambient free electrons, and can thus reduce the number density of free electrons especially below the electrojet peak. This can alter the vertical profile of the east-west Hall current driven by the vertical Hall polarization field, thereby causing a net reduction in the electrojet current. Such a decrease in the electrojet current may be observed on the ground magnetograms. This mechanism, as proposed here, can operate only during periods of strong meteor shower activity, when the dust particle density at the assumed deposit height of 103 km can reach extreme values (for example, 5×104 cm−3 of 1-µm diameter dust particles). Such a dense dust layer may even cause a reversal in the normally upward vertical Hall polarization field, within the dust layer, causing a reversal of the electrojet currents below the current peak.

Highlights

  • Variations of the magnetic fields on the ground level in a narrow belt on both sides of the geomagnetic equator are mainly due to the electrojet currents that flow in the Eregion of the Earth’s ionosphere

  • It is well accepted that the daytime eastward zonal component of the dynamo electric field in the electrojet region drives an eastward Pedersen current and an upward Hall current

  • Inhibition of this upward Hall current results in the development of a vertical polarization field. This polarization field, in turn, drives an east-west Hall current, enhancing the conductivity in the electrojet region to what is known as the Cowling conductivity

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Summary

Introduction

Variations of the magnetic fields on the ground level in a narrow belt on both sides of the geomagnetic equator are mainly due to the electrojet currents that flow in the Eregion of the Earth’s ionosphere. It is well accepted that the daytime eastward zonal component of the dynamo electric field in the electrojet region drives an eastward Pedersen current and an upward Hall current. Inhibition of this upward Hall current results in the development of a vertical polarization field. This polarization field, in turn, drives an east-west Hall current, enhancing the conductivity in the electrojet region to what is known as the Cowling conductivity. The Cowling conductivity profiles, modified, seem to be in good agreement with the estimated electrojet current profiles

Role of charged dust particles
Theoretical formulation and discussion
Dust layer approximation
Figure 5
Counter electrojet
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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