Abstract

Recent satellite observations of low-energy (0-50 eV) ionospheric ions in the polar cap magnetosphere suggest that these ions are injected at the dayside cleft topside ionosphere. Using a two-dimensional kinetic model, several consequences of this ion flow from a narrow cleft source have been simulated and observed. These include: (1) the Kp/convection-dependent filling of the polar magnetosphere with ionospheric heavy ions, in which these ions are 'blown' further into the polar cap magnetosphere from the cleft during high Kp/convection; (2) the mass- and energy-dependent dispersion of these ions, as in a kind of 'geomagnetic spectrometer'; (3) the creation of 'supersonic' ion outflows as a natural velocity-filter effect of this geomagnetic spectrometer; and (4) the 'parabolic flow' of gravitationally bound heavy ions from the cleft ionosphere resulting in downward flow into the polar cap.

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