The Polar Cap (PC) index combination, PCC: relations to solar wind
properties and global magnetic disturbances
Abstract
The non-negative Polar Cap PCC index built from PCN (North) and PCS
(South) indices correlates better with the solar wind merging electric
field and is more representative for the total energy input from the
solar wind to the magnetosphere and for the development of geomagnetic
disturbances represented by the Kp index and ring current indices than
either of the hemispheric indices. The present work shows that the ring
current index, Dst, to a high degree of accuracy can be derived from a
source function built from PCC indices. The integration of the PCC-based
source function throughout the interval from 1992 to 2018 without
attachment to the real Dst indices based on low latitude magnetic
observations has generated equivalent Dst values that correlate very
well (R=0.86) with the real Dst index values, which are represented with
a mean deviation less than 1 nT and an overall rms deviation less than
13 nT. The precise correlation between the real and equivalent Dst
values has been used to correct the PCC indices for saturation effects
at high intensity disturbance conditions where the Dst index may take
values beyond-100 nT. The relations between PCC and the ring current
indices, Dst and ASY-H have been used, in addition, to derive the
precise timing between polar cap convection processes reflected in the
polar cap indices and the formation of the partial and total ring
current systems. Building the ring current is considered to represent
the energy input from the solar wind, which also powers auroral
disturbance processes such as substorms and upper atmosphere heating.
With current available PC indices, detailed and accurate SYM-H or Dst
index values could be derived up to nearly one hour ahead of actual time
by integration of the PCC-based source function from any previous quiet
state. Thus, the PCC indices enabling accurate estimates of the energy
input from the solar wind are powerful tools for space weather
monitoring and for solar-terrestrial research. 1. Introduction. In the
early Space Age, Dungey (1961) formulated the concept of magnetic
merging processes taking place at the front of the magnetosphere between
the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF), when southward oriented, and
the geomagnetic field, followed by the draping of the combined field
over the pole and reconnection processes in the tail region, where the
solar wind magnetic fields as well as the geomagnetic fields were
restored. The model implies a two-cell convection system, where the
high-latitude antisunward ionospheric and magnetospheric plasma drift
across the polar cap and the return flow in a sunward motion along
auroral latitudes generate the two-cell “forward convection” patterns,
now termed DP2. Later, Dungey (1963) extended his model to include cases
where IMF is northward (NBZ conditions),