Near‐Earth initiation of a terrestrial substorm

  • I. Jonathan Rae
    Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada
  • Ian R. Mann
    Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada
  • Vassilis Angelopoulos
    Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics University of California Los Angeles California USA
  • Kyle R. Murphy
    Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada
  • David K. Milling
    Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada
  • Andy Kale
    Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada
  • Harald U. Frey
    Space Sciences Laboratory University of California Berkeley California USA
  • Gordon Rostoker
    Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada
  • Christopher T. Russell
    Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics University of California Los Angeles California USA
  • Clare E. J. Watt
    Department of Physics University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada
  • Mark J. Engebretson
    Department of Physics Augsburg College Minneapolis Minnesota USA
  • Mark B. Moldwin
    Department of Earth and Space Sciences University of California Los Angeles California USA
  • Stephen B. Mende
    Space Sciences Laboratory University of California Berkeley California USA
  • Howard J. Singer
    NOAA Space Environment Center Boulder Colorado USA
  • Eric F. Donovan
    Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Calgary Calgary, Alberta Canada

書誌事項

公開日
2009-07
権利情報
  • http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor
DOI
  • 10.1029/2008ja013771
公開者
American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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説明

<jats:p>Despite the characterization of the auroral substorm more than 40 years ago, controversy still surrounds the processes triggering substorm onset initiation. That stretching of the Earth's magnetotail following the addition of new nightside magnetic flux from dayside reconnection powers the substorm is well understood; the trigger for explosive energy release at substorm expansion phase onset is not. Using ground‐based data sets with unprecedented combined spatial and temporal coverage, we report the discovery of new localized and contemporaneous magnetic wave and small azimuthal scale auroral signature of substorm onset. These local auroral arc undulations and magnetic field signatures rapidly evolve on second time scales for several minutes in advance of the release of the auroral surge. We also present evidence from a conjugate geosynchronous satellite of the concurrent magnetic onset in space as the onset of magnetic pulsations in the ionosphere, to within technique error. Throughout this time period, the more poleward arcs that correspond to the auroral oval which maps to the central plasma sheet remain undisturbed. There is good evidence that flows from the midtail crossing the plasma sheet can generate north‐south auroral structures, yet no such auroral forms are seen in this event. Our observations present a severe challenge to the standard hypothesis that magnetic reconnection in stretched magnetotail fields triggers onset, indicating substorm expansion phase initiation occurs on field lines that are close to the Earth, as bounded by observations at geosynchronous orbit and in the conjugate ionosphere.</jats:p>

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