Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of in...

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements. / Kosch, Mike J.; Amm, O.; Scourfield, M.W.J.
In: Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 105, No. A11, 11.2000, p. 24889-24898.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kosch, MJ, Amm, O & Scourfield, MWJ 2000, 'A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements', Journal of Geophysical Research, vol. 105, no. A11, pp. 24889-24898. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JA900102

APA

Kosch, M. J., Amm, O., & Scourfield, M. W. J. (2000). A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements. Journal of Geophysical Research, 105(A11), 24889-24898. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JA900102

Vancouver

Kosch MJ, Amm O, Scourfield MWJ. A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements. Journal of Geophysical Research. 2000 Nov;105(A11):24889-24898. doi: 10.1029/2000JA900102

Author

Kosch, Mike J. ; Amm, O. ; Scourfield, M.W.J. / A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements. In: Journal of Geophysical Research. 2000 ; Vol. 105, No. A11. pp. 24889-24898.

Bibtex

@article{f2b50f1d16564a30a3db27f236f7cca3,
title = "A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements",
abstract = "In an earlier paper [Kosch et al., 1998], simultaneous all-sky TV imager and Scandinavian Twin Auroral Radar Experiment (STARE) observations of an ionospheric plasma vortex located poleward of an auroral arc were presented. The vortex is associated with a sudden brightening of the arc and corresponds to an ionospheric region of diverging horizontal electric fields, which is equivalent to a downward field-aligned current (FAC), i.e., the closure current for the upward current above the arc. This event has been revisited because of the subsequent availability of data from the Scandinavian Magnetometer Array. These data, combined with STARE electric fields, have been used to determine the real ionospheric conductance distribution throughout the field of view. As a result, a more realistic, quantitative picture of the current system associated with the arc is obtained than was possible in an earlier model based on an assumed constant conductance. In particular, a complete macroscopic electrodynamic description of a plasma vortex, composed of ionospheric conductances, true horizontal currents, and FACs, is obtained for the first time. It is shown that the plasma vortex corresponds to an area of decreased conductance, thus broadening the FAC distribution and reducing the current density compared to the earlier results. The study illustrates that horizontal conductance gradients should not be neglected when computing FACs.",
keywords = "DCS-publications-id, art-115, DCS-publications-credits, iono-fa, DCS-publications-personnel-id, 7",
author = "Kosch, {Mike J.} and O. Amm and M.W.J. Scourfield",
note = "Copyright (2000) American Geophysical Union.",
year = "2000",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1029/2000JA900102",
language = "English",
volume = "105",
pages = "24889--24898",
journal = "Journal of Geophysical Research",
issn = "0148-0227",
publisher = "American Geophysical Union",
number = "A11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A plasma vortex revisited: The importance of including ionospheric conductivity measurements

AU - Kosch, Mike J.

AU - Amm, O.

AU - Scourfield, M.W.J.

N1 - Copyright (2000) American Geophysical Union.

PY - 2000/11

Y1 - 2000/11

N2 - In an earlier paper [Kosch et al., 1998], simultaneous all-sky TV imager and Scandinavian Twin Auroral Radar Experiment (STARE) observations of an ionospheric plasma vortex located poleward of an auroral arc were presented. The vortex is associated with a sudden brightening of the arc and corresponds to an ionospheric region of diverging horizontal electric fields, which is equivalent to a downward field-aligned current (FAC), i.e., the closure current for the upward current above the arc. This event has been revisited because of the subsequent availability of data from the Scandinavian Magnetometer Array. These data, combined with STARE electric fields, have been used to determine the real ionospheric conductance distribution throughout the field of view. As a result, a more realistic, quantitative picture of the current system associated with the arc is obtained than was possible in an earlier model based on an assumed constant conductance. In particular, a complete macroscopic electrodynamic description of a plasma vortex, composed of ionospheric conductances, true horizontal currents, and FACs, is obtained for the first time. It is shown that the plasma vortex corresponds to an area of decreased conductance, thus broadening the FAC distribution and reducing the current density compared to the earlier results. The study illustrates that horizontal conductance gradients should not be neglected when computing FACs.

AB - In an earlier paper [Kosch et al., 1998], simultaneous all-sky TV imager and Scandinavian Twin Auroral Radar Experiment (STARE) observations of an ionospheric plasma vortex located poleward of an auroral arc were presented. The vortex is associated with a sudden brightening of the arc and corresponds to an ionospheric region of diverging horizontal electric fields, which is equivalent to a downward field-aligned current (FAC), i.e., the closure current for the upward current above the arc. This event has been revisited because of the subsequent availability of data from the Scandinavian Magnetometer Array. These data, combined with STARE electric fields, have been used to determine the real ionospheric conductance distribution throughout the field of view. As a result, a more realistic, quantitative picture of the current system associated with the arc is obtained than was possible in an earlier model based on an assumed constant conductance. In particular, a complete macroscopic electrodynamic description of a plasma vortex, composed of ionospheric conductances, true horizontal currents, and FACs, is obtained for the first time. It is shown that the plasma vortex corresponds to an area of decreased conductance, thus broadening the FAC distribution and reducing the current density compared to the earlier results. The study illustrates that horizontal conductance gradients should not be neglected when computing FACs.

KW - DCS-publications-id

KW - art-115

KW - DCS-publications-credits

KW - iono-fa

KW - DCS-publications-personnel-id

KW - 7

U2 - 10.1029/2000JA900102

DO - 10.1029/2000JA900102

M3 - Journal article

VL - 105

SP - 24889

EP - 24898

JO - Journal of Geophysical Research

JF - Journal of Geophysical Research

SN - 0148-0227

IS - A11

ER -