Multi-instrument observations of the effects of a solar wind pressure pulse on the high latitude ionosphere : a detailed case study of a geomagnetic sudden impulse
Date
17/03/2023Author
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Abstract
The effects of a solar wind pressure pulse on the terrestrial magnetosphere have been observed in detail across multiple datasets. The communication of these effects into the magnetosphere is known as a positive geomagnetic sudden impulse (+SI), and are observed across latitudes and different phenomena to characterise the propagation of +SI effects through the magnetosphere. A superposition of Alfvén and compressional propagation modes are observed in magnetometer signatures, with the dominance of these signatures varying with latitude. For the first time, collocated lobe reconnection convection vortices and region 0 field aligned currents are observed preceding the +SI onset, and an enhancement of these signatures is observed as a result of +SI effects. Finally, cusp auroral emission is observed collocated with the convection and current signatures. For the first time, simultaneous observations across multiple phenomena are presented to confirm models of +SI propagation presented previously.
Citation
Fogg , A , Lester , M , Yeoman , T , Carter , J , Milan , S , Sangha , H , Elsden , T , Wharton , S J , James , M , Malone-Leigh , J , Paxton , L J , Anderson , B J & Vines , S K 2023 , ' Multi-instrument observations of the effects of a solar wind pressure pulse on the high latitude ionosphere : a detailed case study of a geomagnetic sudden impulse ' , Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics , vol. 128 , no. 3 , e2022JA031136 . https://doi.org/10.1029/2022JA031136
Publication
Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2169-9402Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright ©2023. The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Description
Funding: ARF was supported by an STFC studentship, Science Foundation Ireland Grant 18/FRL/6199, and an Irish Research Council Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Fellowship GOIPD/2022/782. ML, TKY, and SEM acknowledge support from the Science and Technology Facilities Council, UKRI, grant no. ST/W00089X/1. JAC is supported by Royal Society grant DHF\R1\211068. HKS was supported by an STFC studentship. TE was supported by a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship (ECF-2019-155), the University of Leicester and the University of Glasgow. SJW was supported by NERC studentship NE/L002493/1. MKJ was supported by STFC Grant ST/W00089X/1. JML was supported by the Irish Research Council. LJP was supported by AFOSR MURI Award 26-0201-51-62.Collections
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