Abstract

Abstract. Forty-five months of continuous spacecraft potential measurements from the Polar satellite are used to study the average electron density in the magnetosphere and its dependence on geomagnetic activity and season. These measurements offer a straightforward, passive method for monitoring the total electron density in the magnetosphere, with high time resolution and a density range that covers many orders of magnitude. Within its polar orbit with geocentric perigee and apogee of 1.8 and 9.0 RE, respectively, Polar encounters a number of key plasma regions of the magnetosphere, such as the polar cap, cusp, plasmapause, and auroral zone that are clearly identified in the statistical averages presented here. The polar cap density behaves quite systematically with season. At low distance (~2 RE), the density is an order of magnitude higher in summer than in winter; at high distance (>4 RE), the variation is somewhat smaller. Along a magnetic field line the density declines between these two altitudes by a factor of 10–20 in winter and by a factor of 200–1000 in summer. A likely explanation for the large gradient in the summer is a high density of heavy ions that are gravitationally bound in the low-altitude polar cap. The geomagnetic effects are also significant in the polar cap, with the average density being an order of magnitude larger for high Kp; for an individual case, the polar cap density may increase even more dramatically. The plasma density in the cusp is controlled primarily by the solar wind variables, but nevertheless, they can be characterized to some extent in terms of the Kp index. We also investigate the local time variation of the average density at the geosynchronous distance that appears to be in accordance with previous geostationary observations. The average density decreases with increasing Kp at all MLT sectors, except at 14–17 MLT, where the average density remains constant. At all MLT sectors the range of the density varies by more than 3 orders of magnitude, since the geostationary orbit may cut through different plasma regions, such as the plasma sheet, trough, and plasmasphere.Key words. Magnetospheric physics (magnetospheric configuration and dynamics; plasmasphere; polar cap phenomena)

Highlights

  • The total electron number density is a key parameter needed for both characterizing and understanding the structure and dynamics of the Earth’s magnetosphere

  • The geomagnetic effects are significant in the polar cap, with the average density being an order of magnitude larger for high Kp; for an individual case, the polar cap density may increase even more dramatically

  • We investigate the local time variation of the average density at the geosynchronous distance that appears to be in accordance with previous geostationary observations

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Summary

Introduction

The total electron number density is a key parameter needed for both characterizing and understanding the structure and dynamics of the Earth’s magnetosphere. Electric field double probe instruments (EFI) provide measurements of the potential difference between a sensor and the satellite body, which depend on the total electron density, as we discuss below. V measurements offer a straightforward, passive method for monitoring the variation of the total electron density in the magnetosphere with a high time resolution (e.g. less than 1 msec) and a range that covers many orders of magnitude. The accuracy of this technique remains valid even for densities well below 1 cm−3, as shown by numerous in situ measurements in the magnetosphere In the second part of this study, Laakso et al (2002) present high-resolution data from individual orbits and examine in more detail some specific magnetospheric regions, such as the cusp, plasmapause, trough, and polar cap

Instrumentation
Derivation of total electron density
Variation of V12s along Polar’s orbit
Statistical results
Meridional electron density distributions
Equatorial electron density distributions
Discussion
Seasonal variation of the polar cap density
Findings
Altitude variation of the polar cap density
Summary

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