Citation

BibTex format

@article{Archer,
author = {Archer, M and Southwood, D and Zhang, S and Sun, Q and Heyns, M},
journal = {Annales Geophysicae},
title = {Characterising mesoscale magnetopause surface waves within magnetosphere--ionosphere--groundcoupling},
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - Abstract. Disturbances to the magnetopause location driven by upstream pressure variations or flow shear instabilities may be described as surface waves, which act as localised sources of field-aligned currents coupling the magnetosphere to the ionosphere. However, their impacts on the ionosphere and ground across representative ranges of wave and system properties are poorly understood. We, therefore, develop a simple numerical model for dispersionless mesoscale magnetopause surface waves within the coupled magnetosphere–ionosphere–ground system to gain insight into how their amplitudes and spatialscales throughout the system might vary with conditions. In general, the impacts of finite wave packets can be decomposed into periodic fluctuations (with matching wavelength to that directly above in the magnetosphere) along with slowly-varying trends that result from finite wave effects. Finite wave packets act in the far-field like a string of alternating field-aligned currents well described both in the ionosphere and on the ground as a two-dimensional current dipole. In the ionosphere, near-field periodic fluctuations exponentially decay over the reduced wavelength latitudinally away from the projected magnetopause boundary layer flux tubes, which may limit how well they can be resolved by radar. The relationship between the magnetic field above and below the ionosphere becomes more complicated for surface waves than infinite plane Alfvén waves due to the additional spatial structure, which introduces interference across the spectrum of wavenumbers present. This modifies how the ionosphere screens, rotates, and spatially smears magnetic field perturbations across all three components in different ways.For typical mesoscale wavelengths this importantly results in latitudinal scales of amplitude and polarisation variation smaller than typical ground magnetometer spacings, motivating the need for denser networks. A range of effective skin depths in th
AU - Archer,M
AU - Southwood,D
AU - Zhang,S
AU - Sun,Q
AU - Heyns,M
TI - Characterising mesoscale magnetopause surface waves within magnetosphere--ionosphere--groundcoupling
T2 - Annales Geophysicae
ER -