Abstract

AbstractA number of interdependent conditions and processes contribute to ionospheric‐origin energetic ( 10 eV to several keV) ion outflows. Due to these interdependences and the associated observational challenges, energetic ion outflows remain a poorly understood facet of atmosphere‐ionosphere‐magnetosphere coupling. Here we demonstrate the relationship between east‐west magnetic field fluctuations ( ) and energetic outflows in the magnetosphere‐ionosphere transition region. We use dayside cusp region FAST satellite observations made near apogee ( 4,180‐km altitude) near fall equinox and solstices in both hemispheres to derive statistical relationships between ion upflow and spectral power as a function of spacecraft frame frequency bands between 0 and 4 Hz. Identification of ionospheric‐origin energetic ion upflows is automated, and the spectral power in each frequency band is obtained via integration of power spectral density. Derived relationships are of the form for upward ion flux at 130‐km altitude, with the mapped upward ion flux for a nominal spectral power nT . The highest correlation coefficients are obtained for spacecraft frame frequencies 0.1–0.5 Hz. Summer solstice and fall equinox observations yield power law indices 0.9–1.3 and correlation coefficients , while winter solstice observations yield 0.4–0.8 with . Mass spectrometer observations reveal that the oxygen/hydrogen ion composition ratio near summer solstice is much greater than the corresponding ratio near winter. These results reinforce the importance of ion composition in outflow models. If observed perturbations result from Doppler‐shifted wave structures with near‐zero frequencies, we show that spacecraft frame frequencies 0.1–0.5 Hz correspond to perpendicular spatial scales of several to tens of kilometers.

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