The Current System of Dipolarizing Flux Bundles and Their Role as Wedgelets in the Substorm Current Wedge

Author(s):  
Jiang Liu ◽  
V. Angelopoulos ◽  
Zhonghua Yao ◽  
Xiangning Chu ◽  
Xu-Zhi Zhou ◽  
...  
2004 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 2135-2149 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Gjerloev ◽  
R. A. Hoffman ◽  
M. M. Friel ◽  
L. A. Frank ◽  
J. B. Sigwarth

Abstract. The behavior of the auroral electrojet indices AU and AL during classical substorms is investigated by the use of global auroral images. A superposition of the 12 AE stations onto global auroral images and identification of the AL and AU contributing stations enable an understanding of the temporal as well as spatial behavior of the indices with respect to the substorm coordinate system and timeframe. Based on this simple technique it was found that at substorm onset the AL contributing station makes a characteristic jump from a location near the dawn terminator to the onset region, typically bypassing one or more AE stations. During the expansion phase this station typically lies at the poleward edge of the surge region. This is the location of the intense substorm current wedge electrojet in the semiempirical self-consistent substorm model of the three-dimensional current system by Gjerloev and Hoffman (2002). This current wedge is fed primarily pre-midnight by an imbalance of the Region 0 and Region 1 field-aligned currents, not from the dawnside westward electrojet. Then during the early recovery phase the AL contributing station jumps back to the dawn sector. The defining AU station does not show any similar systematic behavior. We also find that the dawn side westward electrojet seems to be unaffected by the introduction of the substorm current wedge. According to our model, much of this current is closed to the magnetosphere as it approaches midnight from dawn. Based on the characteristics of the AL station jumps, the behavior of the dawn-side electrojet, and the understanding of the three-dimensional substorm current system from our model, we provide additional experimental evidence for, and an understanding of, the concept of the two component westward electrojet, as suggested by Kamide and Kokubun (1996).


2005 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 2171-2182 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Rostoker ◽  
E. Friedrich

Abstract. The past four decades have seen a considerable amount of research on the study of magnetospheric substorms, and over most of these years the expansive phase of the substorm has been associated with the development of a three dimensional current system that has been termed the substorm current wedge. This current system has been thought to be a consequence of the short-circuiting of crosstail current through the ionosphere, and is viewed as a distinctive current system operating independently from the directly driven current with which it co-exists. The purpose of this paper is to show that the substorm current wedge should be viewed as an equivalent current system rather than a real current system. It will be shown that the magnetic perturbation pattern associated with the current wedge can be modeled as purely a perturbation of the directly driven current system in the midnight sector. Keywords. Magnetospheric physics (Auroral phenomena; Current systems; Magnetotail; Storms and substorms


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Orr ◽  
S. C. Chapman ◽  
J. W. Gjerloev ◽  
W. Guo

AbstractGeomagnetic substorms are a global magnetospheric reconfiguration, during which energy is abruptly transported to the ionosphere. Central to this are the auroral electrojets, large-scale ionospheric currents that are part of a larger three-dimensional system, the substorm current wedge. Many, often conflicting, magnetospheric reconfiguration scenarios have been proposed to describe the substorm current wedge evolution and structure. SuperMAG is a worldwide collaboration providing easy access to ground based magnetometer data. Here we show application of techniques from network science to analyze data from 137 SuperMAG ground-based magnetometers. We calculate a time-varying directed network and perform community detection on the network, identifying locally dense groups of connections. Analysis of 41 substorms exhibit robust structural change from many small, uncorrelated current systems before substorm onset, to a large spatially-extended coherent system, approximately 10 minutes after onset. We interpret this as strong indication that the auroral electrojet system during substorm expansions is inherently a large-scale phenomenon and is not solely due to many meso-scale wedgelets.


2020 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Nishimura ◽  
L. R. Lyons ◽  
C. Gabrielse ◽  
J. M. Weygand ◽  
E. F. Donovan ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 122 (8) ◽  
pp. 8419-8433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gangkai Poh ◽  
James A. Slavin ◽  
Xianzhe Jia ◽  
Jim M. Raines ◽  
Suzanne M. Imber ◽  
...  

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