Space Physics and Aeronomy, Ionosphere Dynamics and Applications. Группа авторов
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СКАЧАТЬ during the 7 UT 26 March 2014 substorm detected by THEMIS ASIs. (a) H‐component of ground magnetic field at Fort Smith (FSMI); (b) THEMIS ASI keogram at FSMI; (c) energy flux in the same format as Panel (b); (d) total energy flux integrated over the five imagers (black: total; colored: mesoscale component detrended over 500 (red), 300 (green), and 100 (blue) km size); (e) the ratio between the mesoscale and total energy fluxes; (f) averaged energy over the five imagers (energy flux‐weighted average); and (g–l) selected snapshots of energy flux maps.

Schematic illustrations of (a) Energy flux; (b) SuperDARN fitted convection map; (c) vertical current technique; and (d) horizontal current at 7:15 UT on 26 March 2014. Panels (b–d) use THEMIS ASI counts as the black-white background.

      While many dayside flow channels decay in the vicinity of the cusp, a portion of them propagates over much longer distances and have a major impact on nightside processes (day‐night interaction) (Nishimura et al., 2014a; Lyons et al., 2016b). A flow channel initiated in the cusp (cusp auroral brightening and PMAF) can propagate into the polar cap (seen as polar cap patches and arcs) (Lockwood, 1991), and even reach the nightside auroral oval. When reaching the nightside auroral poleward boundary, the flow channel drives a PBI and then streamer (de la Beaujardière et al., 1994; Lorentzen et al., 2004; Moen et al., 2007; Zou et al., 2014; Ohtani & Yoshikawa, 2016), indicating triggering of nightside reconnection. If it occurs during the substorm growth phase, the streamer may trigger a substorm by making the near‐Earth plasma sheet unstable (Oguti, 1973; Kepko et al., 2009; Nishimura et al., 2010b; Lyons et al., 2011; Kornilova & Kornilov, 2012). Streamers/auroral flow channels further propagate into the subauroral ionosphere and drive subauroral processes (subauroral polarization streams (SAPS) (Gallardo‐Lacourt et al., 2017; Mishin et al., 2017) and proton aurora (Nishimura et al., 2014b). The day‐night interaction process can also be seen as enhanced plasma density drifting from the dayside to nightside and into the auroral oval, and then further propagating back to the dayside (Zhang et al., 2013b).