scholarly journals Investigating seasonal features of electron temperature enhancement regions in the subauroral ionosphere

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-89
Author(s):  
Артем Гололобов ◽  
Artem Gololobov ◽  
Иннокентий Голиков ◽  
Innokentiy Golikov

The electron temperature enhancement is known to occur in the main ionospheric trough during geomagnetic disturbances. In this paper, we study fea-tures of the formation of the electron temperature (Te) enhancement in the subauroral ionosphere by comparing results of the numerical simulation with measurements of Te onboard the CHAMP satellite under moderate geomagnetic activity conditions. It is shown that depending on the terminator position and universal time (UT), the location of the enhanced Te regions in the subauroral ionosphere varies in different seasons. So, in winter ring-shaped and sickle-shaped regions can be formed, whereas during the equinox and summer periods sickle-shaped regions of different lengths and clarity are generally observed.

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-68
Author(s):  
Артем Гололобов ◽  
Artem Gololobov ◽  
Иннокентий Голиков ◽  
Innokentiy Golikov

The electron temperature enhancement is known to occur in the main ionospheric trough during geomagnetic disturbances. In this paper, we study fea-tures of the formation of the electron temperature (Te) enhancement in the subauroral ionosphere by comparing results of the numerical simulation with measurements of Te onboard the CHAMP satellite under moderate geomagnetic activity conditions. It is shown that depending on the terminator position and universal time (UT), the location of the enhanced Te regions in the subauroral ionosphere varies in different seasons. So, in winter ring-shaped and sickle-shaped regions can be formed, whereas during the equinox and summer periods sickle-shaped regions of different lengths and clarity are generally observed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (7) ◽  
pp. 1871-1885 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. W. Prölss

Abstract. In the nightside subauroral region, heat transfer from the ring current causes a significant increase in the electron temperature of the upper ionosphere. Using DE-2 satellite data, we investigate the properties of this remarkable feature. We find that the location of the temperature enhancement is primarily dependent on the level of geomagnetic activity. For geomagnetically quiet conditions ()the temperature peak is located slightly poleward of 60° invariant latitude. For each decrease in the Dst index by 10 nT, it moves equatorward by about one degree. To a lesser degree, the location of the heating effect also depends on magnetic local time, with a significant positional asymmetry about midnight. The magnitude of the temperature enhancement varies with altitude. Within the height range 280 to 940 km, the peak temperature increases by 73%, on average. Thereby a conspicuous increase in the temperature gradient is observed above about 700km altitude. The magnitude of the heating effect also depends on the level of geomagnetic activity. For a decrease in the Dst index by 100 nT, the peak temperature increases by 46%, on average. This rate of increase, however, depends on season and is significantly smaller during winter conditions. A superposed epoch type of averaging procedure is used to obtain mean latitudinal profiles of the temperature enhancement. For an altitude of 500 km, the following mean properties are derived: amplitude K; width at half this peak value deg; distance between equatorward boundary and maximum deg. On average, a decrease in the electron density is observed at the location of the temperature enhancement, at least at 500 km altitude. At the same time, a moderate increase in the zonal ion drift speed is recorded at this location. During larger geomagnetic storms, the latitudinal profile of the temperature enhancement assumes a more step-function-like shape, with a broad increase in electron temperature poleward from the equatorial edge of the electron temperature enhancement. Also the heating effects may extend to very low latitudes (less than 35° invariant latitude). And residual heating effects are observed long after the storm-substorm activity has ceased. The results obtained in this study should prove useful for both empirical and theoretical modeling of the nightside subauroral ionosphere.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mike Lockwood ◽  
Mathew J. Owens ◽  
Luke A. Barnard ◽  
Carl Haines ◽  
Chris J. Scott ◽  
...  

We study the semi-annual variation in geomagnetic activity, as detected in the geomagnetic indices am, aaH, AL, Dst and the four aσ indices derived for 6-hour MLT sectors (around noon, dawn, dusk and midnight). For each we compare the amplitude of the semi-annual variation, as a fraction of the overall mean, to that of the corresponding variation in power input to the magnetosphere, Pα, estimated from interplanetary observations. We demonstrate that the semi-annual variation is amplified in the geomagnetic data compared to that in Pα, by a factor that is different for each index. The largest amplification is for the Dst index (factor ~ 10) and the smallest is for the aσ index for the noon MLT sector (aσ-noon, factor ≈ 1.1). By sorting the data by the prevailing polarity of the Y-component (dawn-dusk) of the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) in the Geocentric Solar Equatorial (GSEQ) reference frame, we demonstrate that the Russell-McPherron (R-M) effect, in which a small southward IMF component in GSEQ is converted into geoeffective field by Earth’s dipole tilt, is a key factor for the semi-annual variations in both Pα and geomagnetic indices. However, the variability in the southward component in the IMF in the GSEQ frame causes more variability in power input to the magnetosphere Pα than does the R-M effect, by a factor of more than two. We show that for increasingly large geomagnetic disturbances, Pα delivered by events of large southward field in GSEQ (known to often be associated with coronal mass ejections) becomes the dominant driver and the R-M effect declines in importance and often acts to reduce geoeffectiveness for the most southward IMF in GSEQ: the semi-annual variation in large storms therefore suggests either preconditioning of the magnetosphere by average conditions or an additional effect at the equinoxes. We confirm that the very large R-M effect in the Dst index is because of a large effect at small and moderate activity levels and not in large storms. We discuss the implications of the observed “equinoctial” time-of-year (F) – Universal Time (UT) pattern of geomagnetic response, the waveform and phase of the semi-annual variations, the differences between the responses at the June and December solstices and the ratio of the amplitudes of the March and September equinox peaks. We also confirm that the UT variation in geomagnetic activity is a genuine global response. Later papers will analyse the origins and implications of the effects described.


2001 ◽  
Vol 19 (7) ◽  
pp. 723-731 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. L. Afraimovich ◽  
E. A. Kosogorov ◽  
O. S. Lesyuta ◽  
I. I. Ushakov ◽  
A. F. Yakovets

Abstract. In this paper an attempt is made to verify the hypothesis of the role of geomagnetic disturbances as a factor in determining the intensity of traveling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs). To improve the statistical validity of the data, we have used the method involving a global spatial averaging of disturbance spectra of the total electron content (TEC). To characterize the TID intensity quantitatively, we suggest that a new global index of the degree of disturbance should be used, which is equal to the mean value of the rms variations in TEC within the selected range of spectral periods (of 20– 60 min, in the present case). The analysis has been made for a set of 100 to 300 GPS stations for 10 days with a different level of geomagnetic activity (Dst from 0 to –350 nT; the Kp index from 3 to 9). It was found that power spectra of daytime TEC variations in the range of 20–60 min periods under quiet conditions have a power-law form with the slope index k = –2.5. With an increase in the level of magnetic disturbance, there is an increase in the total intensity of TIDs, with a concurrent kink of the spectrum caused by an increase in oscillation intensity in the range of 20–60 min. The TEC variation amplitude is found to be smaller at night than during the daytime, and the spectrum decreases in slope, which is indicative of a disproportionate increase in the amplitude of the small-scale part of the spectrum. It was found that an increase in the level of geomagnetic activity is accompanied by an increase in the total intensity of TEC; however, it does not correlate with the absolute level of Dst, but rather with the value of the time derivative of Dst (a maximum correlation coefficient reaches –0.94). The delay of the TID response of the order of 2 hours is consistent with the view that TIDs are generated in auroral regions, and propagate equatorward with the velocity of about 300–400 m/s.Key words. Ionosphere (ionospheric disturbances; auroral ionosphere; equatorial ionopshere)


2007 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 645-659 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. W. Prölss

Abstract. Although ionospheric troughs are a very important feature of the subauroral ionosphere, many of their properties remain incompletely documented and understood. Here Dynamics Explorer-2 satellite data are used to investigate one specific part of this complex phenomenon, namely its equatorward wall. We find that in the afternoon/evening sector of the Northern Hemisphere the location of this density drop depends primarily on the level of geomagnetic activity and magnetic local time. Longitudinal variations are only of secondary importance. A formula is derived which summarizes these variations. The magnitude of the density drop in the trough wall depends primarily on altitude and longitude, and to a lesser degree on local time and geomagnetic activity. These variations are also described quantitatively. Using a superposed epoch type of averaging procedure, a mean latitudinal profile of the trough wall is derived. No anomalous increase in the density at the equatorward edge of the trough is observed. There is, however, a significant increase in the electron temperature at the location of the density drop. Our results are important for the empirical description and numerical simulation of ionospheric troughs. They also may be used to define the boundary between middle and subauroral latitudes.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafal Sieradzki ◽  
Jacek Paziewski

<p>The main ionospheric trough represents a large scale depletion of plasma density elongated in longitude, which is typically observed at the boundary between high- and mid-latitude ionosphere. The trough is characterized  by a steep density gradient in a poleward direction and gradual on the equatorward site. According to the recent studies it begins in the late afternoon, moves equatorward during the night hours and rapidly retreats to higher latitudes at a dawn. Due to the dynamic of auroral oval, this ionospheric feature exhibits a high temporal variability and shifts equatorward during the geomagnetic activity. In this work we demonstrate the initial assessment of the ionospheric trough detection performed with GNSS-based relative STEC values. The basis of this indicator are time series of  geometry-free combination with removed background variations. The separation of these low-term effects is realized with a polynomial fitting applied to the particular arcs of data. Such processed data have an accuracy of phase measurements and provide an epoch-wise information on enhancement/depletion of plasma density. In order to evaluate the applicability of the proposed approach for the trough detection, we have analyzed the state of the ionosphere during different geomagnetic conditions. In our investigations we have used the data from several tens of stations located in the northern hemisphere, what makes possible to provide the comprehensive view of this ionospheric phenomenon. The results have confirmed that the network-derived relative STEC values can be successfully used for the monitoring ionospheric trough. Its signature is more pronounced for expanded auroral oval during increased geomagnetic activity and reach in such case a few TEC units.     </p>


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document