Relation between the asymmetric ring current effect and the anti-sunward auroral currents, as deduced from CHAMP observations
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Published:2020-06-24
Issue:3
Volume:38
Page:749-764
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ISSN:1432-0576
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Container-title:Annales Geophysicae
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Ann. Geophys.
Author:
Lühr HermannORCID, Zhou Yun-LiangORCID
Abstract
Abstract. During magnetically active periods the storm-time disturbance
signal on the ground commonly develops an azimuthal asymmetry. Negative deflections of the magnetic horizontal (H) component are enhanced in the
18:00 local time sector and smallest in the morning sector. This is commonly
attributed to the asymmetric ring current effect. In this study we investigate the average characteristics of anti-sunward net currents that
are not closing in the ionosphere. Their intensity is growing proportionally
with the amount of solar wind input to the magnetosphere. There is almost
twice as much current flowing across the polar region in the winter
hemisphere as on the summer side. This seasonal dependence is more
pronounced in the dusk sector than in the dawn sector. Event studies reveal that anti-sunward currents are closely related to the main phase of a magnetic
storm. Since the asymmetry of storm-time disturbances also builds up during the main phase, we suggest a relation between these two phenomena. From a
statistical study of ground-based disturbance levels during magnetically
active periods, we obtain support for our suggestion. We propose a new 3D current system responsible for the zonally asymmetric storm-time disturbance
signal that does not involve the ring current. The high-latitude
anti-sunward currents are connected at their noon and midnight ends to
field-aligned currents that lead the currents to the outer magnetosphere.
The auroral net current branch on the morning side is closed along the dawn
flank near the magnetopause, and the evening side currents flow along the
dusk flank magnetosphere. Regardless through which loop the current is
flowing, near-Earth storm-time disturbance levels will in both cases be
reduced in the morning sector and enhanced in the evening.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geology,Astronomy and Astrophysics
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