Physics – Plasma Physics
Scientific paper
Apr 2006
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2006georl..3308109s&link_type=abstract
Geophysical Research Letters, Volume 33, Issue 8, CiteID L08109
Physics
Plasma Physics
12
Magnetospheric Physics: Cusp, Magnetospheric Physics: Magnetopause And Boundary Layers, Magnetospheric Physics: Magnetotail Boundary Layers, Magnetospheric Physics: General Or Miscellaneous, Space Plasma Physics: Instruments And Techniques
Scientific paper
A new method is described which calculates the velocity of observed, quasi-stationary structures at every moment in time from multi-point magnetic field measurements. Once the magnetic gradient tensor G = $\nabla$$\vec {B and the time variation of the magnetic field have been estimated at every moment, the velocity can then be determined, in principle, as a function of time. One striking property of this method is that we can calculate the velocity of structures for any dimensionality: for three-dimensional structures, all three components of the velocity vector can be calculated directly; for two-dimensional (or one-dimensional) structures, we can calculate the velocity along two (or one) directions. The advantage of this method is that the velocity is determined instantaneously, point by point through any structure, and so we can see the time variation of the velocity as the spacecraft traverse the structure. In this paper, the feasibility of the method is tested by calculating the motion velocity of a three-dimensional, near cusp structure and a two-dimensional magnetotail current sheet. The results for one-dimensional structures in the magnetopause and cusp boundaries are compared to calculations for the standard techniques for analyzing discontinuities.
Balogh André
Dunlop Malcolm W.
Liu Zhen-Xing
Lucek Elizabeth
Pu Zu Yin
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