Title: DEFINITION, CALCULATION, AND PROPERTIES OF THE Dst INDEX
1DEFINITION, CALCULATION, AND PROPERTIES OF THE
Dst INDEX
Presentation at GEM 1998 WorkshopSnowmass,
ColoradoJune 15-19, 1998
- R.L. McPherron
- Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics
- University of California Los Angeles
- rmcpherron_at_igpp.ucla.edu
2MINOR MAGNETIC STORM RECORDED AT SAN JUAN -
11/24/96
3INTERPLANETARY MAGNETIC FIELD, AE AND Dst INDICES
DURING STORM
- Coronal mass ejection produce intervals of strong
southward Bz at the earth - Magnetic reconnection drives magnetospheric
convection - Convection drives currents along field lines and
through ionosphere - Ground magnetometers record effects of
ionospheric currents in H and other components - H traces are used to construct the AE and Dst
index
4GEOGRAPHIC COORDINATES USED IN MAGNETIC
MEASUREMENTS
- Dipole is tilted and inverted relative to
rotation axis - Dipole field lines are nearly vertical above 60?
latitude - Cartesian geographic coordinates are defined in a
plane tangent to earth at observers location - X component is towards geographic north pole
- Y component is east along a circle of latitude
- Z component is radially inward or down
5LOCAL VIEW OF VARIOUS COORDINATE SYSTEMS USED IN
GEOMAGNETISM
- Origin is located at observer
- X points north, Y points east, Z points down in
the local tangent plane - F is the total vector field
- H is the horizontal projection of the vector F
- D is the east declination of H from geographic
north in tangent plane - I is the inclination of F below the tangent plane
- X, Y, Z are the geographic Cartesian components
of F
6SCHEMATIC ILLUSTRATION OF EFFECTS OF RING CURRENT
IN H COMPONENT
Projection of a uniform axial field onto Earths
surface
Magnetic effects of a symmetric equatorial ring
current
7MAGNETIC EFFECT OF A RING CURRENT AT EARTHS
CENTER
- Axial field from a circular ring current
Z
X
LRRe
Westward RingCurrent
8LONGITUDINAL PROFILE OF ?Bj FROM MAGNETOSPHERIC
CURRENTS
- Symmetric ring should create nearly constant
longitudinal profile in H component - Local time average of ?H at equator approximates
?B at center of Earth - But other magnetospheric currents create local
time dependent deviations from symmetry - Assume asymmetric component has zero mean when
averaged over local time - Define the disturbance storm time index Dst as
local time average of observed ?H profile
9DISTRIBUTION OF RING CURRENT AND ITS PERTURBATION
IN A MERIDIAN
- Most of the current is concentrated close to the
equator - Eastward current inside and westward outside
- Perturbations curl around the volume of current
- The perturbation over the earth is nearly uniform
and axial
10THE SOLENOIDAL EFFECT OF THE RADIATION BELT
CURRENTS
- A more realistic model of the ring current
- Shows the magnetic perturbations
- Shows the distortion of dipole current contours
- Perturbation field from ring current
11DESSLER-PARKER-SCKOPKE DERIVATION
12THE DESSLER-PARKER-SCKOPKE RELATION
13CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE VARIATION IN THE H COMPONENT
14CURRENTS CONTRIBUTING TO MIDLATITUDE MAGNETIC
PERTURBATIONS
- View is from behind and aabove earth looking
toward Sun - Current systems illustrated
- Symmetric ring current
- Dayside magnetopause current
- Partial ring current
- Tail current
- Substorm current wedge
- Region 1 current
- Region 2 current
- Current systems not shown
- Solar quiet day ionospheric current
- Secular variation within earth
- Main field of Earth
15EFFECTS OF MAGNETOPAUSE ON THE Dst INDEX
10
- Balance magnetic pressure against dynamic pressure
8
6
4
Neutral
Point
2
Z (Re)
0
-2
Solar
-4
Wind
-6
-8
-10
0
5
10
15
X (Re)
16A SHEET CURRENT MODEL OF EFFECT OF TAIL CURRENT
ON Dst
xxx
x
x
x
Ri
Ro
Bz
xxx
x
x
x
17MAGNETIC EFFECTS OF A SUBSTORM CURRENT WEDGE
- Transverse currents in the magnetosphere are
diverted along field lines to the ionosphere - Viewed from above north pole the projection of
the current system has a wedge shape - Midlatitude stations are primarily affected by
field-aligned currents and the equatorial closure
(an equivalent eastward current) - The local time profile of H component is
symmetric with respect to the central meridian of
wedge - The D component is asymmetric with respect to
center of wedge
18STEPS IN THE CALCULATIONOF Dst INDEX
- Define the reference level for H component on a
monthly basis - Fit a polynomial to reference H values (secular
variation) - Adjust H observed on a given day by subtracting
secular variation - Identify quiet days from same season and phase of
solar cycle - Remove storm effects in quiet values and offset
traces so that there is zero magnetic
perturbation at station midnight - Flag all values recorded during disturbed times
and interpolate from adjacent quiet intervals - Create some type of smoothed ensemble average of
all quiet days - Subtract average quiet day from adjusted daily
variation to obtain disturbance daily variation
for station - Repeat for a number of stations distributed
around the world at midlatitudes - Project the local H variations to obtain axial
field from ring current and average over all
stations
19ESTIMATION OF THE SECULAR TREND INH COMPONENT AT
SAN JUAN
20REMOVAL OF SECULAR TREND FROM HOURLY VALUES OF H
AT GUAM DURING STORM
4
COMPARISON OF GUAM H WITH SECULAR TREND IN 1986
x 10
395.5
Secular Trend
3.59
3.585
Observed H (nT)
3.58
3.575
115
120
125
130
135
140
DEVIATION OF GUAM H FROM SECULAR TREND IN 1986
50
0
-50
Transient H (nT)
-100
115
120
125
130
135
140
Day in 1986
21REMOVAL OF STORM EFFECTS IN QUIET DAY (Sq)
ESTIMATION
COMPARISON OF DETRENDED GUAM H TO MIDNIGHT SPLINE
50
0
-50
Disturbance (nT)
Midnight Spline
-100
H Comp
115
120
125
130
135
140
DETRENDED AND STORM CORRECTED GUAM H IN 1986
80
60
40
Residual H (nT)
20
0
-20
115
120
125
130
135
140
Day in 1986
22QUIET VALUES DURING STORM USED IN QUIET DAY (Sq)
ESTIMATION
80
Flagged Point
Quiet Value
70
60
50
40
30
Transient H (nT)
20
10
0
-10
-20
115
120
125
130
135
140
Day in 1986
23Sq FOR H AT SAN JUAN IN 1978 AS FUNCTION OF DAY
OF YEAR AND UT
-5
350
-5
0
10
0
300
20
25
15
0
5
250
0
20
200
Day of Year
15
0
0
5
0
0
150
10
15
25
20
30
31.1
100
50
20
25
0
-5
5
0
5
10
15
20
UT Hour
-5
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Diurnal Variation (nT)
24QUIET GUAM H TRACE AT EQUINOX AND SOLSTICE 1986
25COMPARISON OF SEVERAL OBSERVED AND PREDICTED
QUIET DAYS AT GUAM IN 1986
Observed
Quiet
Disturbance (nT)
Residual
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
Day in 1986
26CORRECTED H AT GUAM DURING RECOVERY FROM A
MAGNETIC STORM
60
40
20
0
Quiet H
-20
-40
Disturbance (nT)
-60
-80
Corrected H
-100
Observed H
-120
-140
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
Day in 1986
27DELTA H AT MIDLATITUDES DURING MAGNETIC STORM
28MAJOR SUBSTORMS DURING MAGNETIC STORM OF APRIL
3-5, 1979
29CONCLUSIONS
- The Dst index is defined to be linearly
proportional to the total energy of particles
drifting in the radiation belts (symmetric ring
current) - Dst must be estimated from surface measurements
of the horizontal component of the magnetic field - Surface field measurements include effects of
many electrical currents other than the symmetric
ring current - These effects must be estimated or eliminated by
the algorithm that calculates the Dst index - Extraneous currents include secular variation,
Sq, magnetopause, tail, Region 12, partial ring
current, substorm current wedge, magnetic
induction - There are numerous assumptions and errors
involved in Dst calculations and the index
contains systematic and random errors as a
consequence - Be aware of these problems and take them into
account in interpreting Dst!