Название: Space Physics and Aeronomy, Ionosphere Dynamics and Applications
Автор: Группа авторов
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Физика
isbn: 9781119815532
isbn:
Figure 4.6 (a) TEC map of the Northern Hemisphere using ground‐based receivers only; (b) TEC map results from the reanalysis by combining multiple data sources together
(from Yue et al., 2016; Reproduced with permission of John Wiley and Sons).
In the polar cap region, the Earth's magnetic field is nearly vertical. Thus, the ExB convection flow and the horizontal thermospheric wind cannot efficiently lift or descent the F‐region density structures. Indeed, using the TIEGCM model, Liu et al. (2016) studied the 2015 St. Patrick's Day storms and found that the horizontal transport due to the E×B ion drift plays an essential role in moving plasma from the dayside convection throat region to the polar cap to form plume/TOIs. Similar results have been obtained using the Global Ionosphere and Thermosphere model (GITM) in Zou and Ridley (2016). In their study, SED plume/TOIs in the polar cap region have been traced backward to the subauroral region during the 24–25 October 2011 geomagnetic storm. Simulation results suggest that plasma originating from both the dawn and dusk sectors is able to contribute to the formation of the SED plume in the model. However, the ionospheric plasma originating from different local time sectors can have different properties in terms of the F‐region peak density NmF2 and the peak height hmF2. Plasma originating from the dawn sector exhibits slow but steady increase in hmF2, NmF2, and TEC as the flux tube drifting from lower to higher latitudes, while those from the dusk sector experience more steep increase and decrease in hmF2 and TEC because of larger convection flow variations. This suggests that the hmF2, together with the TEC value, might provide a means for understanding the origin of the plasma that contributes to formation of the SED plumes.
Several mechanisms have been proposed for segmenting SED plume/TOI entering the polar cap into a patch and reviewed by Carlson (2012). These mechanisms either highlight the variations in the solar wind and IMF, and thus high‐latitude convection electric field, or ion‐neutral interactions in the region of large electric fields (Anderson et al., 1988; Lockwood & Carlson, 1992; Rodger et al., 1994; Valladares et al., 1996, 1998; Zhang et al., 2013a). One mechanism, transient reconnection, is accompanied by soft electron precipitation from the magnetosheath. The precipitating electrons can cause ionization and heat the cusp plasma. Patches created by this mechanism are found to have lower density and lower optical luminosity (Hosokawa et al., 2016; Oksavik et al., 2006; Zhang et al., 2013b) than those originated from the dayside solar EUV‐produced plasma. Periodic poleward‐moving auroral forms (PMAFs) produced by those precipitating soft electrons shown in Hosokawa et al. (2016) only reached ~150 R, which is lower than the typical patch luminosity on the nightside (Hosokawa et al., 2006). In the future, it may be more sensible to treat the relatively low‐density patches and higher‐density patches separately, since they might be produced by different mechanisms.
Carlson et al. (2006) and Carlson (2004) suggest that dayside reconnection is the dominant mechanism responsible for the patch production in the European sector. Whether the dayside reconnection can also account for a majority of the patches observed in the American sector needs further study, since the northern magnetic pole is located within the Canadian sector and the inclination/declination angles of magnetic field lines in the European and North American sectors are very different. In addition, high‐resolution coupled ionosphere‐thermosphere models will be needed to quantitatively evaluate the different formation mechanisms of the polar cap patches.
On the nightside, patches exit the polar cap and become a boundary blob. A statistical study using 8 years of data from the meridian scanning photometer data from Ny‐Aalesund reveals that the patches exiting the nightside polar cap mainly and nearly symmetrically around the magnetic midnight (Moen et al., 2007). A subsequent study further identified that a clear preference for earlier premidnight/later postmidnight MLTs under positive/negative IMF By (Moen et al., 2015).
4.5 ION UPFLOW ASSOCIATED WITH POLAR CAP HIGH‐DENSITY STRUCTURES
The F‐region and topside ionospheric density is enhanced within the high‐density ionospheric structures. Convective transport of these high‐density structures into regions with enhanced precipitating particle fluxes has been suggested to be an important mechanism of generating large ion upflow fluxes (Lotko, 2007; Yau et al., 2011). Without particle precipitation, the field‐aligned plasma flows within these high‐density structures are usually downward (Ren et al., 2018; Sojka et al., 1997). When these high‐density structures convect antisunward following the convection flows to regions, such as the dayside cusp and the nightside auroral zone, intense type‐2 ion upflow fluxes (Wahlund et al., 1992), and even divergent fluxes, can form.
Observationally, a couple of fortuitous measurements showed large ion upflow fluxes on the nightside that can be related to the polar cap patches and SED plumes (Semeter et al., 2003; Tu et al., 2007; Yuan et al., 2008; Zhang et al., 2016; Zou et al., 2017b) . Using the Sondrestrom ISR, Semeter et al. (2003) reported an observation of strong ion upflow event due to drifting polar cap patch into particle precipitation at the nightside auroral poleward boundary. Combining GPS TEC and DMSP satellite observations, Yuan et al. (2008) reported large ion vertical fluxes of ~1.2 x 1014 m‐2s‐1 measured by DMSP satellite within the SED, when it reached the nightside polar cap boundary during the 20 November 2003 superstorm. Recently, during a strong polar cap expansion event on 1 June 2013, soft electron precipitations in the cusp region moved equatorward and crossed a preexisting SED plume, resulting in strong heating and divergent ion flows and fluxes (Zou et al., 2017b). Figure 4.7 shows the 2‐D TEC map at 0100 UT on 1 June 2013 with an evident SED plume, and the PFISR field‐aligned beam observations of the plasma density, temperature, flow, and flux within the plume. The peak upflow fluxes reached ~2 x 1014 m‐2s‐1 at ~600 km in this event. Using the radio plasma imager (RPI) on the IMAGE satellite, Tu et al. (2007) found that the plasma density at ~7 RE can increase and decrease subsequently, when the SED plume extends to the polar cap and then disappears, and thus suggested that the high‐altitude density increase is due to the enhanced cleft ion fountain effect.
Figure 4.7 (a) TEC map at 0100 UT on 1 June 2013 shows the extension of SED plume into the Alaska sector. The black segments highlight the field of view of the PFISR radar. (b)–(f) PFISR field‐aligned beam observation of the density, ion temperature, electron temperature, field‐aligned velocity, and flux. Divergent plasma fluxes are seen within the SED plume when the open‐closed boundary moved across the beam
(from Zou et al., 2017b; Reproduced with permission of John Wiley and Sons).
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