Space Weather Disturbances in Non‐Stormy Times: Occurrence of dB/dt Spikes During Three Solar Cycles

Author:

Hamrin M.1ORCID,Schillings A.1,Opgenoorth H.1ORCID,Nesbit‐Östman S.1ORCID,Krämer E.1ORCID,Araújo J.2,Baddeley L.3ORCID,Gunell H.1ORCID,Pitkänen T.14ORCID,Gjerloev J.5ORCID,Barnes R. J.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics Umeå University Umeå Sweden

2. Department of Science and Mathematics Education Umeå University Umeå Sweden

3. Department of Arctic Geophysics University Centre in Svalbard Longyearbyen Norway

4. Institute of Space Sciences Shandong University Weihai China

5. Johns Hopkins University Laurel MD USA

Abstract

AbstractSpatio‐temporal variations of ionospheric currents cause rapid magnetic field variations at ground level and Geomagnetically Induced Currents (GICs) that can be harmful for human infrastructure. The risk for large excursions in the magnetic field time derivative, “dB/dt spikes”, is known to be high during geomagnetic storms and substorms. However, less is known about the occurrence of spikes during non‐stormy times. We use data from ground‐based globally covering magnetometers (SuperMAG database) from the years 1985–2021. We investigate the spike occurrence (|dB/dt| > 100 nT/min) as a function of magnetic local time (MLT), magnetic latitude (Mlat), and the solar cycle phases during non‐stormy times (−15 nT ≤ SYM‐H < 0). We sort our data into substorm (AL < 200 nT) intervals (“SUB”) and less active intervals between consecutive substorms (“nonSUB”). We find that spikes commonly occur in both SUBs and nonSUBs during non‐stormy times (3–23 spikes/day), covering 18–12 MLT and 65°–80° Mlat. This also implies a risk for infrastructure damage during non‐stormy times, especially when several spikes occur nearby in space and time, possibly causing infrastructure weathering. We find that spikes are more common in the declining phase of the solar cycle, and that the occurrence of SUB spikes propagates from one midnight to one morning hotspot with ∼10 min in MLT for each minute in universal time (UTC). Finally, we discuss causes for the spikes in terms of spatio‐temporal variations of ionospheric currents.

Funder

Swedish National Space Agency

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Geophysics

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