PLASMA TRANSPORT ALONG DISCRETE AURORAL ARCS
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PLASMA TRANSPORT ALONG PLASMA TRANSPORT ALONG DISCRETE AURORAL ARCSDISCRETE AURORAL ARCS
PLASMA TRANSPORT ALONG PLASMA TRANSPORT ALONG DISCRETE AURORAL ARCSDISCRETE AURORAL ARCS
A.A. Kullen Kullen 11, T. Johansson , T. Johansson 22, S. Buchert , S. Buchert 11, and S. Figueiredo , and S. Figueiredo 22
11 Swedish Institute of Space Physics, Uppsala Swedish Institute of Space Physics, Uppsala 22 School of Electrical Engineering, KTH, Stockholm School of Electrical Engineering, KTH, Stockholm
AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, December 2007
INTRODUCTIONINTRODUCTION Common features of static discrete
auroral arcs are: field-aligned potential drop and strong perpendicular E-field above.
Due to the field-parallel E-fields, the region above the acceleration region is partly decoupled from the ionosphere and strong, local plasma flows along the auroral arc are the consequence.
Haerendel et al. (1996)
AIM OF THE STUDY: The role of rapid plasma flows
connected to intense E-fields for the large-scale plasma convection is investigated.
INTRODUCTIONINTRODUCTION
Haerendel (1992, 2000, 2002) proposed: The east-west extension of auroral arcs indicates a
connection with the global convection system. A filamentation of the plasma sheet and field-aligned
currents results in discrete auroral arcs. The strong plasma flows connected to the arcs will contribute considerably to the large-scale plasma convection.
The discretization is a more effective way of magnetospheric pressure release, as the locally enhanced plasma convection helps to remove magnetospheric stresses from the source region, i.e., discrete arcs serve as “auroral pressure valves”. From Härendel (2000)
After Boström (1964)
DATA SELECTIONDATA SELECTION
The work is based on Cluster electric field (EFW instrument) and density data (CIS instrument and spacecraft potential).
The dataset consists of 32 very intense E-field events that occur 4-7 Re above the ionosphere with mapped electric field magnitudes of 500-1000 mV/m.
The events analyzed here are a subset from a statistical study by Johansson et al. (2006). Only those events have been taken into account where data is available for an extended period of time.
CLUSTER PASSAGES ABOVE THE IONOSPHERE
CLUSTER PASSAGES ABOVE THE IONOSPHERE
Due to Clusters orbit (apogee at 4 Re maps to 62 degrees CGlat), mainly the high-latitude part of the auroral oval is covered.
Cluster coverage of 4-7 Re during 2001-2003
Johansson et al. (2005)
E-PEAK DISTRIBUTION ALONG THE OVAL
E-PEAK DISTRIBUTION ALONG THE OVAL
The majority of extremely strong E-peak events appears in the pre-midnight region. The dawnside oval is nearly devoid of extremely strong E-peak cases (see also Newell et al., 1996).
Strong E-field events (>150 mV/n) are mainly found at 70-75 deg CGlat.Extremely strong E-field events (> 500 mV/m) appear on lower latitudes.
(This study)
Cluster passages containing E-peaks > 500 mV/m
Johansson et al. (2005)
Strong E-peaks > 150 mV/m
nu
mb
er o
f even
ts
E-fi
eld
mag
nitu
de (m
V/m
)
THE DIRECTION OF BACKGROUND PLASMA FLOW DURING INTENSE E-PEAK
EVENTS
THE DIRECTION OF BACKGROUND PLASMA FLOW DURING INTENSE E-PEAK
EVENTS
The average plasma flow during Cluster passages containing intense E-peaks is in 14 cases sunward and in 18 cases antisunward.
Most sunward flow events appear on the nightside oval.
Anti-sunward flow events appear everywhere except at dawn.
BACKGROUND PLASMA FLOW DURING E-PEAK EVENTS: DEPENDENCE ON
SUBSTORM PHASE
BACKGROUND PLASMA FLOW DURING E-PEAK EVENTS: DEPENDENCE ON
SUBSTORM PHASE
Most strong E-peak events appear during active times:E-peaks during substorms: 30 eventsE-peaks during quiet times: 2 events
Substorm expansion and main phase (increasing or max AE): E-peak events at nightside, with sunward background flow.
Substorm recovery and quiet times (decreasing or low AE):E-peak events at dusk and dayside, with anti-sunward background flow.
NET PLASMA TRANSPORT CONNECTED TO STRONG E-PEAKS
NET PLASMA TRANSPORT CONNECTED TO STRONG E-PEAKS
Plasma flows connected to discrete arcs are directed in opposite directions on the different sides of the arc.
A net plasma transport occurs only when the connected E-peak is nearly monopolar or the arc is located at a density gradient.
high-density regionlow-density region
E-field
particle flux
density
auroral arc
Johansson et al. (in press) show: Most intense E-field events
appear at plasma boundaries. Monopolar E-peaks are 4
times more common than bipolar E-peaks.
As suggested in Marklund et al. (2004) monopolar E-peaks occur as the density is not high enough on the low-density side to support connecting field-aligned currents.
NET PLASMA TRANSPORT CONNECTED TO STRONG E-PEAKS
NET PLASMA TRANSPORT CONNECTED TO STRONG E-PEAKS
monopolar E-field bipolar E-field
j//
E
n
steep density gradient
weak density gradient
Johansson et al. (2006) show: Monopolar E-field
structures are connected to steep density gradients.
Bipolar E-field structures are connected to weak density gradients.
EXAMPLE 1:April 15, 2002 event
EXAMPLE 1:April 15, 2002 event
Two broad, nearly monopolar E-field structures appear near the PC boundary of the dusk oval.
One of the nearly monopolar E-peaks appears in connection with a density maximum. This leads to an important net plasma transport in anti-sunward direction.
The particle flux connected to the strongest E-peak contributes significantly to the total plasma transport in the plotted oval region (see integrated flux curve).
E-fi
eld
flu
x fl
ux
den
sity
EXAMPLE 2:April 27, 2002 event
EXAMPLE 2:April 27, 2002 event
A strong, narrow E-field peak appears in the high-latitude part of the dusk oval.
It causes a plasma transport in anti-sunward direction. The background flux is in sunward direction.
The plasma transport connected to the E-peak is negligible compared to the total flux across the plotted oval region.
Reason: the E-peak is too narrow to play an important role for the total plasma transport.
E-fi
eld
flu
x fl
ux
den
sity
THE INFLUENCE OF STRONG E-PEAKS ON THE TOTAL PLASMA TRANSPORTTHE INFLUENCE OF STRONG E-PEAKS ON THE TOTAL PLASMA TRANSPORT
E-peak direction com-pared to background flow
Same direction Opposite direction
E-peak contribution to average background flow
Important contributio
n
Negligible contributio
n
Important contributio
n
Negligible contributio
n
Expansion/Peak Substorm
5 events 6 events 2 events -
Recovery/Quiet times
5 events 1 event - 4 events
Small substorm/SMC
1 event 2 events 1 event 5 events
All Events 11 events 9 events 3 events 9 events
Results: 2/3 of all strong E-peaks are in same direction as background flux Only 1/3 of all strong E-peaks contribute much to the background convection
E-PEAK CONTRIBUTION TO PLASMA TRANSPORT:
WHY FILAMENTATION DOES NOT WORK
E-PEAK CONTRIBUTION TO PLASMA TRANSPORT:
WHY FILAMENTATION DOES NOT WORK
The magnitude of intense E-field events is inversely proportional to the E-peak width (scalesize S(E)).
The potential is only weakly increasing (nearly constant) up to a scale size of 13 km
Conclusion: A filamentation of the E-field into narrow structures does in most cases not lead to an enhanced net plasma transport.
Potential versus E-peak width
E-peak magnitude versus E-peak width
Number of events versus E-peak magnitude
Johansson et al. (Ann. Geophys., in press)
SUMMARYSUMMARY
32 strong E-field peaks above 500 V/m are examined that are measured by the Cluster satellites when they are 4-7 Re above the Earth. Due to the Cluster obits the examined E-peaks appear all on 65 deg latitude or higher.
For the studied intense E-field events, the background flow during expansion is in most cases sunward, during recovery in most cases anti-sunward.
In 2/3 of all cases the net plasma flux connected to strong E-peaks is in the same direction as the background flow.
In only 1/3 of all cases, the plasma flux caused by the E-peak makes an important contribution to the plasma transport. The reason is the narrow width of high E-peaks.
This questions the role of discrete auroral arcs as major drivers of plasma convection.
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