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Magnetospheric solitary structure maintained by 3000 km/s ions as a cause of westward moving auroral bulge at 19 MLT.
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Magnetospheric solitary structure maintained by 3000 km/s ions as a cause of westward moving auroral bulge at 19 MLT M. Yamauchi1, I. Dandouras2, P.W. Daly3, G. Stenberg4, H. Frey5, P.-A. Lindqvist6, Y. Ebihara7, R. Lundin1, H. Nilsson1, H. Reme2, M. Andre4, E. Kronberg3, and A. Balogh8 (1) IRF, Kiruna, Sweden, (2) CESR, Toulouse, France, (3) MPS, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany, (4) IRF, Uppsala, Sweden, (5) UCB/SSL, Berkeley, CA, USA, (6) Alfvén Lab., KTH, Stockholm, Sweden, (7) IAR, Nagoya U., Nagoya, Japan, (8) Blackett Lab., ICL, London, UK Cluster workshop, 2009-5-15
Cluster Perigee S/C * Z ≈ 0 RE * 60 GMLat * 19 MLT sun tail
overview ions > 5000 km/s ions ≈ 3000 km/s P/A 0.01~40 keV P/A 06:42 06:44 06:46 06:48 IMAGE (FUV)
Sudden change in field ExB (>50 km/s) is observed e.g., 57 km/s : He+~ 70 eV H+ ~ 17 eV
Timing (B ≠ E) propagate (1) single peak of E: lead by SC-3 by 1~10 sec (2) Pi2-like rarefaction of B: simultaneous at all SC
Timing from ExB convection SC-3 leads against SC-1 by 10 sec: agree with field data
& E is nearly // to Propagation direction Timing Sunward propagation of E 1000~2000 km
06:43 UT event (arrival of auroral bulge) Sunward propagation (5~10 km/s) of DC field * depletion of |B|≈BZ up to 25% * polarization E≈-EX of up to 10 mV/m * ExB convection (up to 50 km/s) of cold He+ (without O+)
increase in ion flux decrease in ion flux H+ < 90 keV H+ > 160 keV
increase in ion flux He < 350 keV O < 0.9 MeV O > 1.4 MeV He > 700 keV decrease in ion flux
All relevant ion channel 3000 km/s = 50 keV (H), 190 keV (He), 740 keV (O) 5000 km/s = 130 keV (H), 500 keV (He), 2 MeV (O)
06:43 UT event (arrival of auroral bulge) (a) Sunward propagation (5~10 km/s) of DC field * depletion of |B|≈BZ up to 25% * polarization E≈-EX of up to 10 mV/m * ExB convection (up to 50 km/s) of cold He+ (b) Net flux Increase of selectively 3000 km/s ions * ∆P3000km/s = 3 nPa = - ∆PB. * net decrease of other energetic particles.
Drift motion VB energy (mass independent) 50 keV H+ drift = 15 km/s 190 keV He+ drift = 60 km/s 740 keV O+ drift = 220 km/s Simultaneous appearance & much faster than the motion of the E-structure a solitary structure to maintain the flux peak VExB= constant (energy mass)
ion-scale ? gradient is less than 500 km (5~10 km x 50 sec) cf. RB (= mv/qB) for B ≈ 200 nT condition RB(H+) ≤ gradient ≤ RB(He+) << RB(O+)
06:43 UT event (arrival of auroral bulge) (a) Sunward propagation (5~10 km/s) of DC field * depletion of |B|≈BZ up to 25% * polarization E≈-EX of up to 10 mV/m * ExB convection (up to 50 km/s) of cold He+ (b) Net flux Increase of selectively 3000 km/s ions * ∆P3000km/s = 3 nPa = - ∆PB. * net decrease of other energetic particles. * propagating solitary structure. * scale size ~ gyro radius
overview ions > 5000 km/s ions ≈ 3000 km/s P/A 0.01~40 keV P/A 06:42 06:44 06:46 06:48 IMAGE (FUV)
// keV ion At around 06:44 UT, appearance of 7 keV // O+ from both hemisphere, within 40 sec difference
06:43 UT event (arrival of auroral bulge) (a) Sunward propagation (5~10 km/s) of DC field * depletion of |B|≈BZ up to 25% * polarization E≈-EX of up to 10 mV/m * ExB convection (up to 50 km/s) of cold He+ (b) Net flux Increase of selectively 3000 km/s ions * ∆P3000km/s = 3 nPa = - ∆PB. * Net decrease of other energetic particles. * propagating solitary structure. * scale size ~ gyro radius (c) Conjugate with auroral bulge * Parallel O+ of ≈ 7 keV is detected
conclusion 1000~2000 km Cluster observed westward moving auroral bulge at 19 MLT on 2002-5-19 is caused by a solitary structure in the magnetosphere. The solitary structure consists of polarization E-field (up to 10 mV/m) and depletion of B≈Bz. This solitary structure is maintained by energetic ions of 3000 km/s speed for all ions. Size (gradient < 500 km) of this solitary structure is comparable to the ion gyro radius of carrier ions.
Many other interesting topics (1) Qualitative inter-SC difference (2) Inter-SC time-of-flight examination (3) Decoupling technique of different plasma using conservation of magnetic moment
Qualitative difference within Rgyro Distribution function Difference cannot be explained by the slight difference in effective energy between SC. RB >> inter-SC distance cannot be due to finite gyroradius effect. gradient is substantially large?
TOF effect or phase effect? TOF (7 keV O+ = 250 km/s & SC-1 -100km- SC-4 -150km- SC-3) or Phase-angle dependence?
TOF (7 keV O+ = 250 km/s) SC-1/SC-4/SC-3 = 100 km/150 km or Phase-angle dependence?
Energy-time dispersion (flux increase) time-of-flight? (No) ∆T ~ 10 sec for ∆VD~ 10 km/s source < 1000 km No finite gyroradius? (Yes) ∆T ~ 10 sec for ∆RB~ 100 km agree with propagation VDB = 10~20 km/s VDB = 20~30 km/s VDB = 30~50 km/s VDB = 50~100 km/s
Energetic electron vs B observed flux |B| Synchronize with B field variation
µB = W/B conserved? not really increasing flux = real under µB = const df(µB) = 0 (∂f/∂W)B > 0 (∂f/∂B)W > 0
Linear decoupling after decoupling the conservation of µB = W/B observed flux
Westward surging aurora Akasofu et al., 1966 Fujii et al., 1994 = strong upward FAC
conclusion - continued The 3000 km/s ions are the main carrier of the propagating diamagnetic current that caused the magnetic depletion propagating sunward. The sunward propagation of this solitary structure caused the sunward propagation of field-aligned potential drop and hence of the auroral bulge.
sunward propagation profile E
Dst ≈ -60 nT Global condition: minor storm
overview > 5000 km/s 3000 km/s 0.01~40 keV P/A P/A
IMAGE/FUV 06:26~06:56 UT ~06:43 event S/C 06:26 UT 06:34 UT 06:42 UT 06:50 06:28 UT 06:36 UT 06:44 UT 06:52 06:30 UT 06:38 UT 06:46 UT 06:54 06:32 UT 06:40 UT 06:48 UT 06:56
AE and Bx Main phase of minor storm (Dst ~ -60 nT). 2. Substorm onset at around 06:25 UT but ceased in ~10 min. 3. New activity started at around 06:38 UT. 4. Aurora bulge arrived Cluster’s conjugate ~19 MLT at around 06:42~06:44 UT.
ion-scale ? All SC should observe the same behavior of ions if ion gyro-radius (RB = mv/qB) >> inter-S/C distance RB for B ≈ 200 nT condition
consolation S/C distance ≈ 100 km in z direction & 50 km in x-y direction ≈ RB for 10~20 keV H+ << RB for Ring current ions H+ > 20 keV (O+ > 2 keV) should behave the same at all SCs if the gyrotropic assumption is correct
06:43 UT event (arrival of auroral bulge) (a) Sunward propagation (5~10 km/s) of DC field * depletion of |B|≈BZ up to 25% * polarization E≈-EX of up to 10 mV/m * ExB convection (up to 50 km/s) of cold He+ (without O+) (b) Net flux Increase of selectively 3000 km/s ions (∆P3000km/s = 3 nPa = - ∆PB). * Net flux decrease of other energetic particles. * Energy-time dispersion * 100 keV H+ ~ ∆E, and 50 keV H+ ~ ∆B (c) Ionospheric plasma that is accelerated by parallel potential of about 7 kV.
But, there is inter-SC difference RAPID (SSD) data
inter-SC difference ! For flux increase: (1) SC-2 < SC-1 < SC4=SC3 H+: 80~160 keV He+: 200~300 keV (2) SC-2 > SC-1 > SC4=SC3 H+: ~60 keV O+: 500~600 keV Hybrid: (5) SC-2 > SC-1 > SC4 > SC3 O+: 400~500 keV For flux decrease: (3) SC-2 < SC-1 < SC4=SC2 He+: 400~700 keV (4) SC-2 > SC-1 > SC4=SC3 O+: ~400 keV
no wave@06:43 UT, wave@06:48 UT 150 nT ΩP = 4 Hz ion dE dB S// E/B ΩHe? dBZ BB-EM spin effects stagnant dBX
Composition from energy ratio (1) From energy peak: plasmaspheric He+ rich // Precursor (06:44 UT) Heating (06:49 UT) • = 0° • = 180° • = 360° // H+ He+ O+ 18eV 70eV H+ He+ ratio=4: O+/He+ or He+/H+ 10 100 [eV] 10 100 [eV]