Abstract

AbstractBoth the bow shock and magnetopause move in response to varying solar wind and magnetospheric conditions. Tracking their locations can provide important clues to the state of the solar wind‐magnetosphere interaction, but is difficult with single spacecraft observations. This paper employs multipoint THEMIS observations of velocity gradients in the subsolar magnetosheath to remotely sense boundary locations on a continual basis for various solar wind conditions. We present three cases: (a) continuous northward IMF and no magnetopause motion; (b) southward IMF and no magnetopause motion with evidence of nightside activity; and (c) southward IMF and pressure increase with inward motion. When observing spacecraft are located near the Sun‐Earth line, inferred boundary locations agree well with the predictions of the BATS‐R‐US global magnetohydrodynamic model, confirming the utility of both the new method and the models. Results show that boundaries often lie nearly at rest with amplitudes less than 0.5 RE. They provide evidence indicating that nightside reconnection and a strong sunward convection in the outer magnetosphere can counteract the magnetopause erosion expected when a southward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) initiates reconnection on the dayside magnetopause.

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