SAPS/SAID revisited: A causal relation to the substorm current wedge

Abstract

We present multispacecraft observations of enhanced flow/electric field channels in the inner magnetosphere and conjugate subauroral ionosphere, i.e., subauroral polarization streams (SAPS) near dusk and subauroral ion drifts (SAID) near midnight. The channels collocate with ring current (RC) injections lagging the onset of substorms by a few to ∼20 min, i.e., significantly shorter than the gradient‐curvature drift time of tens of keV ions. The time lag is of the order of the propagation time of reconnection‐injected hot plasma jets to the premidnight plasmasphere and the substorm current wedge (SCW) to dusk. The observations confirm and expand on the previous results on the SAID features that negate the paradigm of voltage and current generators. Fast‐time duskside SAPS/RC injections appear intimately related to a two‐loop circuit of the substorm current wedge (SCW2L). We suggest that the poleward electric field inherent in the SCW2L circuit, which demands closure of the Region 1 and Region 2 sense field‐aligned currents via meridional currents, is the ultimate cause of fast RC injections and SAPS on the duskside.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Aug 01, 2017
Source ID
10.1002/2017ja024263

Entities

People

  • Evgeny Mishin
  • John C. Foster
  • Yukitoshi Nishimura

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Air Force Research Laboratory
  • Boston University
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  • National Sleep Foundation
  • University of California, Los Angeles

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Economics
  • Fluid Dynamics.
  • Space/Atmospheric Physics.