Abstract

Abstract. Two event studies are presented in this paper where intense convergent electric fields, with mapped intensities up to 1350 mV/m, are measured in the auroral upward current region by the Cluster spacecraft, at altitudes between 3 and 5 Earth radii. Both events are from May 2003, Southern Hemisphere, with equatorward crossings by the Cluster spacecraft of the pre-midnight auroral oval. Event 1 occurs during the end of the recovery phase of a strong substorm. A system of auroral arcs associated with convergent electric field structures, with a maximum perpendicular potential drop of about ~10 kV, and upflowing field-aligned currents with densities of 3 µA/m2 (mapped to the ionosphere), was detected at the boundary between the Plasma Sheet Boundary Layer (PSBL) and the Plasma Sheet (PS). The auroral arc structures evolve in shape and in magnitude on a timescale of tens of minutes, merging, broadening and intensifying, until finally fading away after about 50 min. Throughout this time, both the PS region and the auroral arc structure in its poleward part remain relatively fixed in space, reflecting the rather quiet auroral conditions during the end of the substorm. The auroral upward acceleration region is shown for this event to extend beyond 3.9 Earth radii altitude. Event 2 occurs during a more active period associated with the expansion phase of a moderate substorm. Images from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) F13 spacecraft show that the Cluster spacecraft crossed the horn region of a surge-type aurora. Conjugated with the Cluster spacecraft crossing above the surge horn, the South Pole All Sky Imager recorded the motion and the temporal evolution of an east-west aligned auroral arc, 30 to 50 km wide. Intense electric field variations are measured by the Cluster spacecraft when crossing above the auroral arc structure, collocated with the density gradient at the PS poleward boundary, and coupled to intense upflowing field-aligned currents with mapped densities of up to 20 µA/m2. The surge horn consists of multiple arc structures which later merge into one structure and intensify at the PS poleward boundary. The surge horn and the associated PS region moved poleward with a velocity at the ionospheric level of 0.5 km/s, following the large-scale poleward expansion of the auroral oval associated with the substorm expansion phase. Keywords. Ionosphere (Ionosphere-magnetosphere interacctions; Electric fields and currents; Particle acceleration)

Highlights

  • Precipitating electrons accelerated to energies of several keV producing the visible bright discrete aurora are a characteristic feature of the auroral upward current region

  • The existence of a parallel electric field in the auroral upward current region was theoretically postulated by Alfven (1958) and experimentally confirmed by McIlwain (1960), who inferred the parallel potential drops from monoenergetic peaks in the electron spectra measured on a sounding rocket

  • In this study we present two events (Event 1 and Event 2) from May 2003, Southern Hemisphere, where intense perpendicular electric field variations, associated with the crossings of negative potential structures, in the auroral upward current region, are measured at the density gradient associated with the boundary between the Plasma Sheet Boundary Layer (PSBL) and the Plasma Sheet (PS)

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Summary

Introduction

Precipitating electrons accelerated to energies of several keV producing the visible bright discrete aurora are a characteristic feature of the auroral upward current region. This incoherence between the potential profile, and the associated FAC density and electron energy flux distributions, is believed to be related to temporal variations associated with the thinning of the PSBL, which is most pronounced at the edges. This plot shows that all the Cluster spacecraft encountered the poleward boundary of the PS, and the collocated equatorward edge of the potential structure, at approximately the same position

Event 2 – 3 May 2003 – Temporal and spatial analysis
Discussion and conclusions
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