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Comparison of Rice Model Results with IMAGE Data

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Early Main Phase of March 31, 2001 Storm. Note: Most ring current in dusk-midnight quadrant. ... Berkeley Magnetic Storm Seminar 13 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Comparison of Rice Model Results with IMAGE Data


1
Comparison of Rice Model Results with IMAGE Data
  • R. A. Wolf, Rice University

Unpublished results provided by Stanislav
Sazykin and Jerry Goldstein (Rice) Shin-Yi Su
(National Central Univ.) Pontus Brandt (JHU/APL)
and HENA Team Bill Sandel (U. Arizona) and EUV
Team Mei-Ching Fok (Goddard)
2
Comparison of Rice Model Results with IMAGE Data
  • Introduction and Outline
  • Rice Convection Model
  • Some Comparisons with IMAGE Data
  • Overshielding and Plasmapause Shape
  • Formation of Symmetric Ring Current in Recovery
    Phase
  • Location of the Peak of the Main-Phase Ring
    Current
  • Additional Issues Id Like to Address with IMAGE
    Data
  • SubAuroral Plasma Streams (SAPS)
  • Interchange Instability
  • Summary

3
Models of Convection E from 1960s and 1970s
Uniform Dawn- Dusk Field
Fact There is a dawn-to-dusk electric field
across the interior of the magnetosphere.
Without corotation
With corotation
Fact The inner edge of the plasma sheet tends to
shield the near-Earth region from the convection
E field.
Stern-Volland E Field
4
Rice Convection Model Theoretical Approach
  • Electric field calculated theoretically
  • Models based on these equations imply that the
    inner edge of the plasma sheet tends to shield
    the inner magnetosphere from the main force of
    convection.

5
Undershielding
  • It takes a while for the inner edge of the plasma
    sheet to react to an increase in convection.
  • Inner magnetosphere is poorly shielded for a
    while after a sudden increase in convection.
    Average dawn-dusk E is positive in inner
    magnetosphere.

Shielded again after 2 hours of strong convection
Shielding after long period of steady convection
Undershielding after sudden increase of convection
(Sazykin, 2000)
6
Overshielding
  • It takes a while for the inner edge of the plasma
    sheet to react to an decrease in convection.
  • Inner magnetosphere is overshielded for a while
    after a sudden decrease in convection.

Shielded again after 1.5 hours of weak convection
Shielding after long period of strong convection
Overshielding after sudden decrease of convection
(Sazykin, 2000)
Note Overshielding was discovered by Kelley et
al. (1977) and well quantified by Fejer and
Scherliess (1995), both using measurements of
plasma flows in the equatorial ionosphere.
7
Overshielding Observed at L4 by IMAGE
  • A gradual northward turning of the IMF 14-19 UT
    on July 28 caused an outward motion of the
    plasmapause in the post-midnight sector.
  • Caused a shoulder that had rotated to the day
    side by 3 UT on 29 July.

28 July
RCM-predicted overshielding pattern
(Goldstein et al., 2003)
8
Cartoon of Plasmasphere Shoulder Formation
9
Overshielding Subtlety
  • Kelley et al. (1977) originally explained the
    overshielding phenomenon observed in the
    equatorial ionosphere in terms of reaction to a
    sudden reduction in polar-cap potential.
  • In the RCM, it was difficult to explain the
    observed duration of overshielding (1- 2 hr),
    because the nightside plasma sheet requires 20
    min. to adjust to a change in potential drop
    (Spiro et al., 1988).
  • Fejer et al. (1990) suggested that the duration
    of the equatorial response to a northward turning
    was due to magnetic reconfiguration (lessening of
    the magnetic flux in the magnetotail).
  • The inner-magnetospheric response to the long,
    slow northward turning of July 28, 2000 must have
    been due to magnetic reconfiguration.

10
RCM Plasmapause vs EUV Data
  • Note
  • Duskside slot extends eastward during period of
    weak convection (panels 1-3)
  • Strong convection generates 2nd plume (panel 3).
  • Dayside fills with cold plasma after hours of
    strong convection (panel 4)
  • Reasonable model-data agreement
  • RCM puts plasmapause too far out on dusk side.

11
RCM Partial Pressure
Early Main Phase of March 31, 2001 Storm
HENA 39-60 keV Fluxes
Note Most ring current in dusk-midnight
quadrant. Little on day side
Data from Pontus Brandt, Model results Stanislav
Sazykin
12
RCM Partial Pressure
Late Main Phase of March 31, 2001 Storm
HENA 39-60 keV Fluxes
Note Ring current has begun to penetrate to day
side.
Data from Pontus Brandt, Model results Stanislav
Sazykin
13
RCM Partial Pressure
End of Main Phase of March 31, 2001 Storm
HENA 39-60 keV Fluxes
  • Just after a strong decrease in convection, the
    ring current occupies most of the afternoon
    sector.

Data from Pontus Brandt, Model results Stanislav
Sazykin
14
RCM Partial Pressure
Early Recovery Phase of March 31, 2001 Storm
HENA 39-60 keV Fluxes
Note Ring current has curled around into morning
sector.
Data from Pontus Brandt, Model results Stanislav
Sazykin
15
Later in Recovery Phase
RCM Partial Pressure
Note Model ring current is nearly symmetric
Model results Stanislav Sazykin
16
Main Phase of August 12, 2000 Storm
IMAGE ENA, 27-39 keV
CRCM Model, 8 UT, 32 keV
  • Note Ring current is concentrated between
    midnight and dawn, in both ENA data and model.
    Brandt et al. (2002) showed that this was very
    common.

Model results from Mei-Ching Fok. (Fok et al.,
2002)
17
RCM Partial Pressure
Early Main Phase of March 31, 2001 Storm
HENA 39-60 keV Fluxes
Note Most ring current in dusk-midnight
quadrant. Little on day side
Data from Pontus Brandt, Model results Stanislav
Sazykin
18
Equipotential Twisting
CRCM Run for 8/12/00
RCM Run for 3/31/01
  • Maximum westward E peaks near dawn.
  • SAPS extends well past midnight.
  • Westward E extends further west.
  • SAPS does not extend past midnight.

CRCM run by M.-C. Fok, RCM run by S. Sazykin
19
Twisting of Inner Magnetospheric Equipotentials
Early main phase of 31 March 2001 storm
After modest increase in polar-cap potential
  • Nightside equipotentials are much more twisted in
    the major-storm simulation than in a modest
    convection increase.
  • Major storm exhibits clear SAPS in dusk sector.

20
Physics of Equipotential Twisting
  • We know at least two physical mechanisms that
    cause the nightside inner-magnetospheric electric
    field pattern to rotate counter-clockwise
  • In a steady state, shielded magnetosphere, the
    inner magnetospheric penetration field is rotated
    90 east relative to the outer-magnetospheric
    pattern.
  • The conductance changes at the terminator,
    combined with the Hall conductance, generates a
    tailward E in nightside inner magnetosphere
    (counter-clockwise rotation of pattern).
  • The rotation of the inner magnetospheric pattern
    (particularly the westward penetration field)
    causes the ring current injection to rotate in
    the same sense and can make the 40-60 keV part of
    the ring current peak post-midnight.
  • The amount of counter-clockwise rotation is
    highly variable both in the RCM and in Nature.
  • We still dont understand the reasons for the
    variability
  • Sensitive to details of the ionospheric-conductanc
    e pattern, particularly in the region just
    equatorward of the diffuse aurora.
  • Related to the SAPS phenomenon
  • May depend on other factors, such as plasma sheet
    temperature

21
Other Points to be Investigated with IMAGE Data
  • How does the SAPS affect the plasmapause in a
    storm?
  • Does a SAPS bring the plasmapause closer to Earth
    in the dusk-midnight sector?
  • Does IMAGE see evidence of ring-current
    interchange instability?
  • Henderson et al. (Fall 2002 AGU) reported
    observation of giant undulations in the aurora.
    Was this ring-current interchange?

22
RCM Plasmapause vs EUV Data
  • Note
  • Duskside slot extends eastward during period of
    weak convection (panels 1-3)
  • Strong convection generates 2nd plume (panel 3).
  • Dayside fills with cold plasma after hours of
    strong convection (panel 4)
  • Reasonable model-data agreement
  • RCM puts plasmapause too far out on dusk side.

23
Sazykin et al., 2002
24
Prediction of Interchange Instability
  • If the main phase of a storm ends because of a
    sharp decrease in solar wind density, while the
    IMF remains southward, interchange instability
    should occur at the outer edge of the newly
    injected ring current.
  • Henderson et al. (Fall 2002 AGU) reported seeing
    giant auroral undulations during a storm that
    occurred November 24, 2001.
  • We hope to investigate that event to see if the
    undulations are due to interchange.

25
Summary
  • We think we have explained the plasmapause-shoulde
    r phenomenon in terms of overshielding.
  • CRCM/RCM results are consistent with two HENA
    observations
  • The HENA-range main-phase ring current often
    peaks post-midnight.
  • The effect varies from storm to storm.
  • In the model, this is related to equipotential
    twisting.
  • We havent sorted out the physical mechanisms
    that govern the degree of twisting.
  • Remaining to do
  • Better quantitative agreement.
  • Clarify the relationship between SAPS and the
    plasmapause shape and ring-current distribution.
  • Does IMAGE ever see evidence of ring-current
    interchange instability?

26
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