Journal article
Diagnosing the Role of Alfvén Waves in Magnetosphere‐Ionosphere Coupling: Swarm Observations of Large Amplitude Nonstationary Magnetic Perturbations During an Interval of Northward IMF
Journal of geophysical research. Space physics, Vol.123(1), pp.326-340
01/2018
DOI: 10.1002/2017JA024713
Abstract
High‐resolution multispacecraft Swarm data are used to examine magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling during a period of northward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) on 31 May 2014. The observations reveal a prevalence of unexpectedly large amplitude (>100 nT) and time‐varying magnetic perturbations during the polar passes, with especially large amplitude magnetic perturbations being associated with large‐scale downward field‐aligned currents. Differences between the magnetic field measurements sampled at 50 Hz from Swarm A and C, approximately 10 s apart along track, and the correspondence between the observed electric and magnetic fields at 16 samples per second, provide significant evidence for an important role for Alfvén waves in magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling even during northward IMF conditions. Spectral comparison between the wave E‐ and B‐fields reveals a frequency‐dependent phase difference and amplitude ratio consistent with interference between incident and reflected Alfvén waves. At low frequencies, the E/B ratio is in phase with an amplitude determined by the Pedersen conductance. At higher frequencies, the amplitude and phase change as a function of frequency in good agreement with an ionospheric Alfvén resonator model including Pedersen conductance effects. Indeed, within this Alfvén wave incidence, reflection, and interference paradigm, even quasi‐static field‐aligned currents might be reasonably interpreted as very low frequency (ω → 0) Alfvén waves. Overall, our results not only indicate the importance of Alfvén waves for magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling but also demonstrate a method for using Swarm data for the innovative experimental diagnosis of Pedersen conductance from low‐Earth orbit satellite measurements.
Plain Language Summary
The study shows evidence that electromagnetic waves in the ionosphere and currents flowing into the ionosphere can be described by the same physical model. This is important for estimating the total energy going into the ionosphere and potentially allows deriving important high‐resolution information about the ionosphere by studying data recorded when spacecraft fly over the auroral region.
Key Points
Multipoint Swarm 50 sps magnetic field data reveal unexpectedly large amplitude time‐varying fields which evolve on 10 s timescales
The observed E‐ and B‐field spectra are consistent with a continuum of incident, reflected, and interfering Alfvén waves
Alfvén wave dynamics are shown to be of fundamental importance for magnetosphere‐ionosphere coupling and consistent with an IAR model
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Diagnosing the Role of Alfvén Waves in Magnetosphere‐Ionosphere Coupling: Swarm Observations of Large Amplitude Nonstationary Magnetic Perturbations During an Interval of Northward IMF
- Creators
- I. P. Pakhotin - University of AlbertaI. R. Mann - University of AlbertaR. L. Lysak - University of MinnesotaD. J. Knudsen - University of CalgaryJ. W. Gjerloev - Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics LaboratoryI. J. Rae - University College LondonC. Forsyth - University College LondonK. R. Murphy - Goddard Space Flight CenterD. M. Miles - University of AlbertaL. G. Ozeke - University of AlbertaG. Balasis - National Observatory of Athens
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Journal of geophysical research. Space physics, Vol.123(1), pp.326-340
- DOI
- 10.1002/2017JA024713
- ISSN
- 2169-9380
- eISSN
- 2169-9402
- Number of pages
- 15
- Grant note
- Science and Technology Facilities Council (ST/N000722/1) ESA (4000114090) Natural Environment Research Council (NE/N014480/1; NE/L007495/1; NE/P017150/1) NSERC NSF (AGS‐1558134) Canadian NSERC Canadian Space Agency
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 01/2018
- Academic Unit
- Physics and Astronomy
- Record Identifier
- 9984429029702771
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