Physics
Scientific paper
Dec 2010
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2010jgra..11512230w&link_type=abstract
Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 115, Issue A12, CiteID A12230
Physics
Magnetospheric Physics: Magnetic Reconnection (7526, 7835), Magnetospheric Physics: Plasma Convection (2463), Ionosphere: Plasma Convection (2760), Magnetospheric Physics: Polar Cap Phenomena, Ionosphere: Polar Cap Ionosphere
Scientific paper
The purpose of this paper is to show a “proof of the existence” of the ionospheric situation that is expected for the interchange cycle, during periods of favorable interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) and dipole tilt conditions. To do so, we present three case studies of dayside high-latitude ionospheric convection that is observed around the equinoxes (near-zero dipole tilt) and at small IMF clock angles (one $\theta$c ˜ -30° event and two $\theta$c ˜ 30° events, where $\theta$c ≡ Arg(BZ + iBY)), using Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN)/Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP)/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) data in the Northern Hemisphere and, when available, DMSP data in the Southern Hemisphere. The convection pattern exhibits twin reverse cells in both hemispheres, but the constituents of each cell are different. In the Northern Hemisphere, for $\theta$c ˜ 30° ($\theta$c ˜ -30°), the center of the dawnside (duskside) cell is located poleward of the polar cap boundary, while the center of the duskside (dawnside) cell is located equatorward of the polar cap boundary. For $\theta$c ˜ 30°, we confirmed that the above-mentioned dawn-dusk relation reverses in the Southern Hemisphere. The north-south asymmetric behavior of the conjugate reverse cells, on the dawnside and duskside each, is consistent with two independent interchange cycles that result from the coupling of IMF-lobe reconnection in one hemisphere with lobe-closed reconnection in the opposite hemisphere.
Jean-Pierre St.-Maurice
Hairston Marc R.
Hussey Glenn C.
Koustov Alexandre V.
McWilliams Kathryn A.
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