Other
Scientific paper
Feb 1983
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1983p%26ss...31..193a&link_type=abstract
Planetary and Space Science, vol. 31, Feb. 1983, p. 193-196.
Other
12
Auroral Arcs, Interplanetary Magnetic Fields, Magnetospheric Instability, Polar Caps, Discontinuity, Dynamo Theory, Field Aligned Currents, Plasma Layers
Scientific paper
After reviewing the basic characteristics of the polar cap arcs, it is suggested that their appearance can be explained if the open region splits into two, one located in the dawn sector and the other in the dusk sector. It is suggested that a distinct splitting occurs temporarily when an IMF tangential discontinuity passes by the magnetosphere and the sign of the IMF B-sub-y component changes at the discontinuity, provided that the IMF B-sub-z component is positive on both sides. As a result, the dawn or the dusk side of the polar region will be connected to either the front side or the hind side of the discontinuity, depending on the sign of the B-sub-y component across the discontinuity. As the dynamo process is expected to operate in each of the two open regions (as is the case in the single open region), it is reasonable to infer that a sheet of plasma and of field-aligned currents forms in the region between the two open regions, resulting in the polar cap arcs across the polar region. The four-cell convection pattern may also appear. A model of the magnetosphere is constructed to demonstrate such a possibility.
Akasofu Syuh-Ichi
Roederer M.
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