Abstract

This is the second in a series of papers that investigate the semi-annual, annual and Universal Time (UT) variations in the magnetosphere. We present a varied collection of empirical results that can be used to constrain theories and modelling of these variations. An initial study of two years’ data on transpolar voltage shows that there is a semi-annual variation in magnetospheric flux circulation; however, it is not as large in amplitude as that in geomagnetic activity, consistent with the latter showing a non-linear (quadratic) variation with transpolar voltage. We find that during the persistent minimum of the UT variation in geomagnetic activity, between about 2 and 10 UT, there is also a persistent decrease in observed transpolar voltage, which may be, in part, caused by a decrease in reconnection voltage in the nightside cross-tail current sheet. We study the response of geomagnetic activity to estimated power input into the magnetosphere using interplanetary data from 1995 onwards, an interval for which the data are relatively free of data gaps. We find no consistent variation in the response delay with time-of-year F and, using the optimum lag, we show that the patterns of variation in F-year spectrograms are very similar for geomagnetic activity and power input into the magnetosphere, both for average values and for the occurrence of large events. The Russell–McPherron (R–M) mechanism is shown to be the central driver of this behaviour. However, the (R–M) effect on power input into the magnetosphere is small and there is a non-linear amplification of the semi-annual variation in the geomagnetic response, such that a very small asymmetry in power input into the magnetosphere Pα between the “favourable” and “unfavourable” polarities of the IMF BY component generates a greatly amplified geomagnetic response. The analysis strongly indicates that this amplification is associated with solar wind dynamic pressure and its role in squeezing the near-Earth tail and so modulating the storage and release of energy extracted from the solar wind. In this paper, we show that the equinoctial pattern is found in the residuals of fits of Pα to the am index and that the amplitude of these equinoctial patterns in the am fit residuals increases linearly with solar wind dynamic pressure. Similarly, the UT variation in am is also found in these fit residuals and also increases in amplitude with solar wind dynamic pressure.

Highlights

  • We have shown that the pattern of variations in F-year spectrogram plots in geomagnetic activity and power input into the magnetosphere are very similar in both average values and the occurrence of large events and that the R–M effect is at the heart of both; there is a non-linear amplification of the semi-annual variation in the geomagnetic response

  • This paper has presented a collection of empirical results concerning the semi-annual variation in geomagnetic activity

  • We find there is a semi-annual variation in transpolar voltage but it is not as large in amplitude as that in geomagnetic activity which is consistent with the latter showing a non-linear variation with transpolar voltage

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Summary

Introduction

Paper 1 in this series (Lockwood et al, 2020, hereafter “Paper 1”) reviewed the semi-annual variation in geomagnetic activity, as seen in a number of indices, and highlighted a. Showed that Pa performed consistently better than a basket of other widely-used solar-wind/magnetosphere coupling functions on all averaging timescales tested (between 1 day and 1 year). An important consideration for all coupling functions was studied by Lockwood et al (2019a), namely the effect of data gaps

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