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Field-aligned current during an interval of $\rm B_{Y}$-dominated interplanetary-field; modeled-to-observed comparisons
  • +6
  • Jennifer Alyson Carter,
  • Andrey Samsonov,
  • Stephen E. Milan,
  • Graziella Branduardi-Raymont,
  • Aaron J. Ridley,
  • Larry J. Paxton,
  • Brian J. Anderson,
  • Colin L. Waters,
  • Thomas Edwards
Jennifer Alyson Carter
University of Leicester

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Andrey Samsonov
University College London
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Stephen E. Milan
University of Leicester
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Graziella Branduardi-Raymont
University College London
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Aaron J. Ridley
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
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Larry J. Paxton
Johns Hopkins University
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Brian J. Anderson
John Hopkins Univ.
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Colin L. Waters
University of Newcastle
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Thomas Edwards
DTU Space
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Abstract

We model an interval of sustained northward interplanetary magnetic field, for which we have a comprehensive set of observational data. This interval is associated with the arrival of an interplanetary coronal mass ejection. The solar wind densities at the time are particularly high and the interplanetary magnetic field is primarily northward. This results in strong auroral emissions within the polar cap in a cusp spot, which we associate with lobe reconnection at the high-latitude magnetopause. We also observe areas of upwards field-aligned current within the summer Northern Hemisphere polar cap that exhibit large current magnitudes. The model is able to reproduce the spatial distribution of the field-aligned currents well, even under changing conditions in the incoming interplanetary magnetic field. Discrepancies exist between the modeled and observed current magnitudes. Notably, the winter Southern Hemisphere exhibits much lower current magnitudes overall. We also model a sharp transition of the location of magnetopause reconnection. This changes rapidly from a subsolar location at the low-latitude magnetopause under southward interplanetary magnetic field conditions, to a high-latitude lobe reconnection location when the field is northward. This occurs during a fast rotation of the IMF at the shock front of a magnetic cloud.
Dec 2021Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics volume 126 issue 12. 10.1029/2021JA029722