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The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing

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The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing. / Farrugia, C. J.; Grocott, A.; Sandholt, P. E. et al.
In: Annales Geophysicae, Vol. 25, No. 1, 01.02.2007, p. 191-205.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Farrugia, CJ, Grocott, A, Sandholt, PE, Cowley, SWH, Miyoshi, Y, Rich, FJ, Jordanova, VK, Torbert, RB & Sharma, A 2007, 'The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing', Annales Geophysicae, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 191-205. https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-25-191-2007

APA

Farrugia, C. J., Grocott, A., Sandholt, P. E., Cowley, S. W. H., Miyoshi, Y., Rich, F. J., Jordanova, V. K., Torbert, R. B., & Sharma, A. (2007). The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing. Annales Geophysicae, 25(1), 191-205. https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-25-191-2007

Vancouver

Farrugia CJ, Grocott A, Sandholt PE, Cowley SWH, Miyoshi Y, Rich FJ et al. The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing. Annales Geophysicae. 2007 Feb 1;25(1):191-205. doi: 10.5194/angeo-25-191-2007

Author

Farrugia, C. J. ; Grocott, A. ; Sandholt, P. E. et al. / The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing. In: Annales Geophysicae. 2007 ; Vol. 25, No. 1. pp. 191-205.

Bibtex

@article{7d5e5f93f2894965bdb92d0409643bb9,
title = "The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing",
abstract = "The Earth's magnetosphere was very strongly disturbed during the passage of the strong shock and the following interacting ejecta on 21–25 October 2001. These disturbances included two intense storms (Dst*≈−250 and −180 nT, respectively). The cessation of this activity at the start of 24 October ushered in a peculiar state of the magnetosphere which lasted for about 28 h and which we discuss in this paper. The interplanetary field was dominated by the sunward component [B=(4.29±0.77, −0.30±0.71, 0.49±0.45) nT]. We analyze global indicators of geomagnetic disturbances, polar cap precipitation, ground magnetometer records, and ionospheric convection as obtained from SuperDARN radars. The state of the magnetosphere is characterized by the following features: (i) generally weak and patchy (in time) low-latitude dayside reconnection or reconnection poleward of the cusps; (ii) absence of substorms; (iii) a monotonic recovery from the previous storm activity (Dst corrected for magnetopause currents decreasing from ~−65 to ~−35 nT), giving an unforced decreased of ~1.1 nT/h; (iv) the probable absence of viscous-type interaction originating from the Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability; (v) a cross-polar cap potential of just 20–30 kV; (vi) a persistent, polar cap region containing (vii) very weak, and sometimes absent, electron precipitation and no systematic inter-hemisphere asymmetry. Whereas we therefore infer the presence of a moderate amount of open flux, the convection is generally weak and patchy, which we ascribe to the lack of solar wind driver. This magnetospheric state approaches that predicted by Cowley and Lockwood (1992) but has never yet been observed.",
author = "Farrugia, {C. J.} and A. Grocott and Sandholt, {P. E.} and Cowley, {S. W. H.} and Y. Miyoshi and Rich, {F. J.} and Jordanova, {V. K.} and Torbert, {R. B.} and A. Sharma",
note = "{\textcopyright} European Geosciences Union 2007",
year = "2007",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.5194/angeo-25-191-2007",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "191--205",
journal = "Annales Geophysicae",
issn = "0992-7689",
publisher = "European Geosciences Union",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The magnetosphere under weak solar wind forcing

AU - Farrugia, C. J.

AU - Grocott, A.

AU - Sandholt, P. E.

AU - Cowley, S. W. H.

AU - Miyoshi, Y.

AU - Rich, F. J.

AU - Jordanova, V. K.

AU - Torbert, R. B.

AU - Sharma, A.

N1 - © European Geosciences Union 2007

PY - 2007/2/1

Y1 - 2007/2/1

N2 - The Earth's magnetosphere was very strongly disturbed during the passage of the strong shock and the following interacting ejecta on 21–25 October 2001. These disturbances included two intense storms (Dst*≈−250 and −180 nT, respectively). The cessation of this activity at the start of 24 October ushered in a peculiar state of the magnetosphere which lasted for about 28 h and which we discuss in this paper. The interplanetary field was dominated by the sunward component [B=(4.29±0.77, −0.30±0.71, 0.49±0.45) nT]. We analyze global indicators of geomagnetic disturbances, polar cap precipitation, ground magnetometer records, and ionospheric convection as obtained from SuperDARN radars. The state of the magnetosphere is characterized by the following features: (i) generally weak and patchy (in time) low-latitude dayside reconnection or reconnection poleward of the cusps; (ii) absence of substorms; (iii) a monotonic recovery from the previous storm activity (Dst corrected for magnetopause currents decreasing from ~−65 to ~−35 nT), giving an unforced decreased of ~1.1 nT/h; (iv) the probable absence of viscous-type interaction originating from the Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability; (v) a cross-polar cap potential of just 20–30 kV; (vi) a persistent, polar cap region containing (vii) very weak, and sometimes absent, electron precipitation and no systematic inter-hemisphere asymmetry. Whereas we therefore infer the presence of a moderate amount of open flux, the convection is generally weak and patchy, which we ascribe to the lack of solar wind driver. This magnetospheric state approaches that predicted by Cowley and Lockwood (1992) but has never yet been observed.

AB - The Earth's magnetosphere was very strongly disturbed during the passage of the strong shock and the following interacting ejecta on 21–25 October 2001. These disturbances included two intense storms (Dst*≈−250 and −180 nT, respectively). The cessation of this activity at the start of 24 October ushered in a peculiar state of the magnetosphere which lasted for about 28 h and which we discuss in this paper. The interplanetary field was dominated by the sunward component [B=(4.29±0.77, −0.30±0.71, 0.49±0.45) nT]. We analyze global indicators of geomagnetic disturbances, polar cap precipitation, ground magnetometer records, and ionospheric convection as obtained from SuperDARN radars. The state of the magnetosphere is characterized by the following features: (i) generally weak and patchy (in time) low-latitude dayside reconnection or reconnection poleward of the cusps; (ii) absence of substorms; (iii) a monotonic recovery from the previous storm activity (Dst corrected for magnetopause currents decreasing from ~−65 to ~−35 nT), giving an unforced decreased of ~1.1 nT/h; (iv) the probable absence of viscous-type interaction originating from the Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability; (v) a cross-polar cap potential of just 20–30 kV; (vi) a persistent, polar cap region containing (vii) very weak, and sometimes absent, electron precipitation and no systematic inter-hemisphere asymmetry. Whereas we therefore infer the presence of a moderate amount of open flux, the convection is generally weak and patchy, which we ascribe to the lack of solar wind driver. This magnetospheric state approaches that predicted by Cowley and Lockwood (1992) but has never yet been observed.

U2 - 10.5194/angeo-25-191-2007

DO - 10.5194/angeo-25-191-2007

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

SP - 191

EP - 205

JO - Annales Geophysicae

JF - Annales Geophysicae

SN - 0992-7689

IS - 1

ER -