Field-perpendicular and field-aligned plasma flows observed by EISCAT during a prolonged period of northward IMF |
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Affiliation: | 1. Bonn Alliance for Sustainability Research/Innovation Campus Bonn (ICB), University of Bonn, Bonn D-53113, Germany;2. Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3), Leioa 48940, Spain;3. Department of Ecosystem Research, Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, Müggelseedamm 310, Berlin 12587, Germany;4. Unit of Energy Systems Analysis (dESA), KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Brinellvägen, 68SE-1004 Stockholm, Sweden;5. AI Sustainability Center, Stockholm SE-114 34, Sweden;6. Transparent Internet, Tårup Bygade 30 Mesinge, DK-5370, Denmark;7. Center for Brains, Minds and Machines, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, United States;8. SimEx/FLOW, Engineering Mechanics, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm SE-10044, Sweden |
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Abstract: | The effect of a prolonged period of strongly northward Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) on the high-latitude F-region is studied using data from the EISCAT Common Programme Zero mode of operation on 11–12 August 1982. The analysis of the raw autocorrelation functions is kept to the directly derived parameters Ne, Te, Ti and velocity, and limits are defined for the errors introduced by assumptions about ion composition and by changes in the transmitted power and system constant. Simple data-cleaning criteria are employed to eliminate problems due to coherent signals and large background noise levels. The observed variations in plasma densities, temperatures and velocities are interpreted in terms of supporting data from ISEE-3 and local riometers and magnetometers. Both field-aligned and field-perpendicular plasma flows at Tromsø showed effects of the northward IMF: convection was slow and irregular and field-aligned flow profiles were characteristic of steady-state polar wind outflow with flux of order 1012 m−2 s−1. This period followed a strongly southward IMF which had triggered a substorm. The substorm gave enhanced convection, with a swing to equatorward flow and large (5 × 1012 m−2 s−1), steady-state field-aligned fluxes, leading to the possibility of O+ escape into the magnetosphere. The apparent influence of the IMF over both field-perpendicular and field-aligned flows is explained in terms of the cross-cap potential difference and the location of the auroral oval. |
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