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MSSL Seminar

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Title: MSSL Seminar


1
Tail Reconnection during IMF-Northward
Non-substorm Intervals (TRINNIs) Adrian
Grocott Mullard Space Science Laboratory
Seminar 30 January 2007
2
Introduction - Background
  • In general, southward interplanetary magnetic
    field (IMF) intervals are associated with
    Dungey-cycle flow and the substorm cycle
  • Northward IMF is usually associated with lobe
    reconnection and flow vortices within the polar
    cap
  • However, it is found that for IMF clock angles of
    30 - 45 open flux production at the dayside can
    persist (e.g. Sandholt et al., 1998 Nishida et
    al.,1998)
  • During such intervals no substorms are observed,
    so what is the nightside response to a modest
    dayside driving?

3
Nightside flows during northward IMF
Bursts of equatorward-directed flow accompanied
by an activation of the poleward-most arc system
(De la Beaujardière et al., 1994) North-south
aligned auroral streamers associated with
bursty-bulk flows (BBFs) (Henderson et al.,
1998) Poleward boundary auroral intensifications
(PBIs) and arc bifurcations (Lyons et al.,
1999) Quasi-sinusoidal nightside flow
oscillations - global oscillations of an
essentially closed tail? (Huang et al.,
2001) Narrow bursts of high-speed flow in the
pre-midnight sector interpreted as a
viscously-driven twin-vortex flow system (Walker
et al., 1998, 2002) Surges of westward return
flow in the dusk convection cell
(Senior et al., 2002)
4
Outline
  • Brief overview of large-scale magnetospheric-ionos
    pheric convection The Dungey Cycle
  • Observing large-scale convection using
    high-frequency ionospheric radars - SuperDARN
  • Nightside, large-scale, ionospheric convection
    during IMF-northward intervals the significance
    and importance of TRINNIs
  • Case study 1 An interhemispheric study of
    TRINNI flows
  • Case study 2 Multi-scale observations of TRINNIs

5
Dungey Cycle Convection
x
x
dayside reconnection
6
Dungey Cycle Convection
7
Dungey Cycle Convection
8
Dungey Cycle Convection
9
Dungey Cycle Convection
10
Dungey Cycle Convection
nightside reconnection
11
Dungey Cycle Convection
12
Dungey Cycle Convection
13
Dungey Cycle Convection
14
SuperDARN Super Dual Auroral Radar Network
The CUTLASS Finland Radar
15
SuperDARN Super Dual Auroral Radar Network
16
HF radars Propagation of radio waves in the
ionosphere and the backscatter technique 1.
Low-latitude VHF F-region orthogonality 2.
High-latitude VHF E-region orthogonality 3.
High-latitude VHF F-region reflection /
transmission 4. High-latitde HF F-region
orthogonality
17
12 MLT
SuperDARN Iceland West (Stokkseyri)
1505 UT 21 Jan 2001
12 MLT
12 MLT
12 MLT
WIDTH
VEL
POWER
18 MLT
18 MLT
18 MLT
Field-of-view 16 beams, 75 range gates, 45 km
gate length, max. range 3500 km, f-o-v area
5x106 km2, 1 min scan time Advantages-
Large area covered high time resolution Disadvan
tages- Line-of-sight velocity only
backscatter not ubiquitous
18
Map-potential technique Developed by
APL Combine sparse l-o-s velocities to give
estimate of instantaneous, global potential
pattern
19
Introduction TRINNIs
Substorm TRINNI
from Grocott et al. (2002, 2003)
20
Importance of TRINNIs
  • Grocott et al. (2003) and Milan et al. (2005)
    have demonstrated the importance of TRINNIs in
    closing significant amounts of open flux
  • Various models have been suggested which might
    put our TRINNI observations into global
    perspective (e.g. Nishida et al., 1998 Tanaka,
    1999 Watanabe et al., 2004)

after Milan et al. (2005)
21
Northward IMF open flux production
We propose a simple model of open flux production
under northward IMF, in line with Nishida et al.
(1998), in which field lines with a significant
anti-parallel component reconnect
22
Tail Reconnection Mechanism
  • Dungey-cycle like asymmetric twin-cell convection
    flows
  • Prolonged exposure to By-dominated IMF results in
    asymmetric tail lobes
  • For, e.g. IMF By-positive, tail field lines are
    displaced duskward in the northern hemisphere...

23
Tail Reconnection Mechanism
  • Dungey-cycle like asymmetric twin-cell convection
    flows
  • Prolonged exposure to By-dominated IMF results in
    asymmetric tail lobes
  • For, e.g. IMF By-positive, tail field lines are
    displaced duskward in the northern hemisphere
  • and dawnward in the southern hemisphere

24
Tail Reconnection Mechanism
  • Footpoints of reconnected field lines in one
    hemisphere have a longer path in the ionosphere
  • Gives rise to bursts of fast azimuthal flow in
    the midnight sector
  • Bursts are NOT geomagnetically conjugate -
    therefore may not be simultaneous in both
    hemispheres

25
Tail Reconnection Mechanism
  • For IMF By ve (-ve)
  • Field lines which cross the equatorial plane
    post-midnight, red, return to the dayside via
    dawn producing a N(S)-H flow burst
  • Those crossing pre-midnight, green, return via
    dusk producing a S(N)-H flow burst

(b) after Nishida et al., 1998
26
TRINNIs and Transpolar Arcs
27
Interhemispheric study of TRINNI flows (Grocott
et al. 2005a)
  • ACE magnetic field data from both intervals
    between 1800 and 0400 UT show IMF Bz to have been
    predominantly positive
  • By was negative during one interval and
    predominantly positive during the second
  • The magnitude of the IMF was greater during the
    negative IMF interval

28
SuperDARN Potential Maps
00 MLT
00 MLT
  • IMF By negative
  • Northern hemisphere data show fast westward
    return flows
  • Southern hemisphere data show fast eastward
    return flows

29
SuperDARN Potential Maps
00 MLT
00 MLT
  • IMF By positive
  • Northern hemisphere data show fast eastward
    return flows
  • Southern hemisphere data show fast westward
    return flows

30
SuperDARN Potential Maps
Velocity (m s -1)
00 MLT
31
SuperDARN Velocity Time-Series
  • Enhancements in the flow in both hemispheres
    during both intervals are evident on 30min 1h
    timescales
  • Northern and southern flow enhancements are not
    always coincident
  • Variability in the flow does not generally appear
    to correlate with variability in radar data
    coverage

32
Multi-scale observations of a BBF (Grocott et
al., 2005b)
BY
BZ
BX
Ionospheric radars show large-scale
convection Cluster Spacecraft reveal localised
small-scale flows
C1 C2 C3 C4
33
Multi-scale observations of TRINNIs (Grocott et
al., 2007)
34
Multi-scale observations of TRINNIs (Grocott et
al., 2007)
BZ
BX
BY
C1 C2 C3 C4
35
Multi-scale observations of TRINNIs (Grocott et
al., 2007)
BY
BZ
BX
C1 C2 C3 C4
36
Schematic summary of observations
Schematic representations of tail field line
configurations for different IMF BY (after
Nishida et al., 1998)
(a) S/C YGSM -ve -gt V?Y and SuperDARN VAZ
both -ve / dawnward (b) S/C YGSM -ve -gt V?Y
and SuperDARN VAZ both ve / duskward (c) S/C
YGSM ve -gt V?Y and SuperDARN VAZ both ve /
duskward in the N-H -ve / dawnward
in the S-H
37
BBF azimuthal direction vs. spacecraft position
38
Ionospheric vs. in-situ response to TRINNI
39
Conclusions
  • During northward, but By-dominated, IMF modest
    open flux production at the dayside magnetopause
    continues to drive Dungey-cycle convection, but
    at a rate insufficient to produce substorms
  • Prolonged exposure to such conditions results in
    bursts of fast flow in the nightside
    high-latitude ionosphere which are largely
    azimuthal in direction and opposite in each
    hemisphere
  • These flows we associate with bursts of nightside
    reconnection in an asymmetric magnetotail, this
    asymmetry resulting from the penetration of
    IMF-BY into the tail
  • In-situ magnetospheric observations of the tail
    reveal that the large-scale IMF-BY control of the
    tail is apparent on the smaller scale and that
    BBF-type activity is still the dominant flux
    transport mechanism

40
Values of Flux Transport
  • The substorm discussed here closed 0.2 GWb of
    flux in 60 mins
  • This equates to a net flux closure rate of 55 kV
  • The associated BBF transported 2?106 Wb RE-1 in
    5 mins
  • This equates to a flux transport rate of 6.7 kV
    RE-1
  • So, if BBF activity at this rate transported all
    the closed flux it would have to occur over 8 RE
  • Peak, local, electric fields were 25 mV m-1 in
    the flow channel in the ionosphere and 5 mV m-1
    at Cluster
  • TRINNIs have been observed to close flux at a
    somewhat smaller rate of 35 kV, closing about
    0.5?108 Wb in 20 mins intervals.
  • However, the BBFs observed in association with
    these TRINNIs transported a comparable amount of
    flux 2?106 Wb RE-1
  • So, either less BBFs are involved in the flux
    transport for TRINNIs, or they occur over much
    narrower azimuthal extent
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