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Read Full Article (file size: 800495 bytes) Cited by
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 112,
A05201,
doi:10.1029/2006JA012034,
2007
Extreme polar cap density enhancements along magnetic field lines during an intense geomagnetic storm
J.-N. Tu
Center for Atmospheric Research, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Massachusetts, USA
M. Dhar
Center for Atmospheric Research, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Massachusetts, USA
P. Song
Center for Atmospheric Research, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Massachusetts, USA
B. W. Reinisch
Center for Atmospheric Research, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Massachusetts, USA
J. L. Green
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, USA
R. F. Benson
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, USA
A. J. Coster
MIT Haystack Observatory, Westford, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract
Sounding measurements from the radio plasma imager (RPI) on the IMAGE satellite are used to derive electron number density
distributions along magnetic field lines in the polar cap magnetosphere during an intense magnetic storm. It is shown that
electron densities along magnetic field lines in the polar cap magnetosphere were greatly enhanced on both the dayside and
nightside during the storm, compared to the electron density profiles measured during periods of lower geomagnetic activities.
The electron density enhancements were observed extending to 7 Earth radii (R E) in altitude on the dayside, with the electron density value reaching about 10 cm−3 at 7 R E altitude. The observed density enhancements were likely due to the enhanced cleft ion fountain during the storm although
some of nightside density enhancements might be caused by the increased ion outflows locally in the polar cap. The strongest
electron density enhancements observed on the dayside are possibly further associated with storm-time transport of plasma
from the midlatitude ionosphere and plasmasphere to high latitudes, which manifests as a plasma plume intruding to dayside
high latitudes as seen from total electron content (TEC) maps. With an enhanced source population supplied by the plasma plume,
acceleration and heating processes in the dayside cusp/auroral region may produce a large flux of outflowing plasma along
magnetic field lines while the outflowing plasma is convected anti-sunward toward the polar cap. These processes lead to strongly
enhanced cleft ion fountain and thus greatly raised electron densities at magnetospheric altitudes in the polar cap. The present
study captures an event of a massive redistribution of the magnetospheric and ionospheric plasma during a geomagnetic storm
caused by extreme solar wind/interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) conditions.
Received 21
August
2006;
accepted 20
December
2006;
published 2
May
2007.
Keywords: Polar cap density enhancements;
field-aligned density profile;
geomagnetic storm.
Index Terms: 2730 Magnetospheric Physics: Magnetosphere: inner; 2740 Magnetospheric Physics: Magnetospheric configuration and dynamics; 2776 Magnetospheric Physics: Polar cap phenomena; 2788 Magnetospheric Physics: Magnetic storms and substorms (7954); 2475 Ionosphere: Polar cap ionosphere.
Read Full Article (file size: 800495 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Tu, J.-N., M. Dhar, P. Song, B. W. Reinisch, J. L. Green, R. F. Benson, and A. J. Coster
(2007),
Extreme polar cap density enhancements along magnetic field lines during an intense geomagnetic storm,
J. Geophys. Res.,
112,
A05201,
doi:10.1029/2006JA012034.
Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.
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