Abstract

The morphology of energetic (≥30 keV) electron precipitation during the growth phase of magnetospheric substorms has been investigated using measurements of auroral-zone bremsstrahlung X-rays obtained from multiple balloon flights and supplementing riometer recordings. Growth-phase precipitation typically starts about one hour before the onset of a negative magnetic bay and occurs in a limited region parallel to the auroral oval around local midnight. The precipitation is first observed in the northern part of the auroral zone and moves southwards with a speed of 5–10 km/min. To the north this precipitation therefore ceases well before bay onset whereas a continuous transition from ‘prebay’ precipitation to bay-associated precipitation takes place in the south. A decrease in the intensity or at least a levelling off may occur some minutes before bay onset. The southward movement of the precipitation region is associated with a similar movement of a weak ionospheric current system. The events studied were all associated with a southward-pointing interplanetary magnetic field and with growth-phase conditions in the magnetotail. It is suggested that growth-phase precipitation originates from the ‘horns’ of the plasma sheet. The equatorward motion of the precipitation is then a consequence of an expansion of the polar cap, a thinning of the plasma sheet, and an equatorward motion of its inner edge. It is also suggested that this precipitation provides a stabilization of the outer boundaries of the plasma sheet by restricting the ionospheric mobility of the bordering field lines through enhanced conductivity.

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