scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal Article

Excitation and decay of solar-wind driven flows in the magnetosphere-ionosphere system

Stanley W. H. Cowley, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1992 - 
- Vol. 10, pp 103-115
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors considered the high-latitude ionospheric flows and their excitation and decay and proposed a flow-free equilibrium configuration for a magnetosphere which contains a given (arbitrary) amount of open flux.
Abstract
Basic concepts of the form of high-latitude ionospheric flows and their excitation and decay are discussed in the light of recent high time-resolution measurements made by ground-based radars. It is first pointed out that it is in principle impossible to adequately parameterize these flows by any single quantity derived from concurrent interplanetary conditions. Rather, even at its simplest, the flow must be considered to consist of two basic time-dependent components. The first is the flow driven by magnetopause coupling processes alone, principally by dayside reconnection. These flows may indeed be reasonably parameterized in terms of concurrent near-Earth interplanetary conditions, principally by the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) vector. The second is the flow driven by tail reconnection alone. As a first approximation these flows may also be parameterized in terms of interplanetary conditions, principally the north-south component of the IMF, but with a delay in the flow response of around 30-60 min relative to the IMF. A delay in the tail response of this order must be present due to the finite speed of information propagation in the system, and we show how "growth" and "decay" of the field and flow configuration then follow as natural consequences. To discuss the excitation and decay of the two reconnection-driven components of the flow we introduce that concept of a flow-free equilibrium configuration for a magnetosphere which contains a given (arbitrary) amount of open flux. Reconnection events act either to create or destroy open flux, thus causing departures of the system from the equilibrium configuration. Flow is then excited which moves the system back towards equilibrium with the changed amount of open flux. We estimate that the overall time scale associated with the excitation and decay of the flow is about 15 min. The response of the system to both impulsive (flux transfer event) and continuous reconnection is discussed in these terms.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Motion and origin of noon high‐latitude poleward moving auroral arcs on closed magnetic field lines

TL;DR: In this paper, the magnetic field line eigenfrequency oscillations at the near-cusp L shells are excited by the Alfven impulse associated with the convection disturbance following after variations in the interplanetary magnetic field.

Solar wind impacts on growth phase duration and substorm intensity: A statistical approach

TL;DR: A statistical survey of 379 interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) southward turning events during the time period from 1995 to 2011 is performed to study the impact of solar wind conditions on the substorm growth phase duration and intensity as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dayside and nightside contributions to cross-polar cap potential variations: The 20 March 2001 ICME case

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the association between temporal-spatial structure of polar cap convection and auroral electrojet intensifications during a 5-h-long interval of strong forcing of the magnetosphere by an ICME/Magnetic cloud on 20 March 2001.
Related Papers (5)