Physics
Scientific paper
Sep 2005
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2005jgra..11009204r&link_type=abstract
Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 110, Issue A9, CiteID A09204
Physics
72
Ionosphere: Auroral Ionosphere (2704), Magnetospheric Physics: Electric Fields (2411), Ionosphere: Electric Fields (2712), Ionosphere: Plasma Convection (2760), Magnetospheric Physics: Plasma Convection (2463)
Scientific paper
The database of the nine radars of the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) in the northern hemisphere has been analyzed for information on factors that influence the convection of plasma in the high-latitude ionosphere. The velocity measurements were collected over the period 1998-2002. The data were first used to derive a new statistical model of convection that improves upon the earlier one-radar model of Ruohoniemi and Greenwald (1996) in its specification of the dependence of the convection pattern on the magnitude and direction of the IMF in the GSM Y-Z plane. We then derived average patterns for secondary sortings by season, year, and radar. Such dependencies as emerged were most clearly seen by contrasting the results for By+ and By-. The seasonal effect in the convection pattern is found to have similarities to that of the sign of By. In particular, the combination of By+/summer (By-/winter) reinforces the tendency of the By sign factor to sculpt the dusk and dawn cells into more round/crescent (crescent/round) shapes and to shift the crescent cell across the midnight MLT meridian. However, these combinations are associated with lower estimates of the total cross polar cap potential drop, ΦPC, while the nonreinforcing combinations produce elevated ΦPC, especially By-/summer. There is an overall tendency for ΦPC to increase from winter to summer, although the pure seasonal effect on the potential drop is weaker than that of the By-sign/season factor. We did not find pronounced differences among the patterns derived for the 5 individual years, which spanned the most recent interval of solar cycle maximum. Sorting by radar, we found few differences among the patterns for By+, but for By-, variations emerged that are consistent with a possible dependence on universal time (UT). The impacts of season and UT on convection in the high-latitude ionosphere thus depends on the IMF, especially the sign of By. We speculate that variability in the ionospheric conductivity has a greater effect on magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling under By- conditions.
Greenwald Ray A.
Ruohoniemi Michael J.
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