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Dual-lobe reconnection and horse-collar auroras
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  • Stephen E. Milan,
  • Jennifer Alyson Carter,
  • Gemma E. Bower,
  • Suzanne Mary Imber,
  • Larry J. Paxton,
  • Brian J. Anderson,
  • Marc R. Hairston,
  • Benoit Hubert
Stephen E. Milan
University of Leicester

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Jennifer Alyson Carter
University of Leicester
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Gemma E. Bower
University of Leicester
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Suzanne Mary Imber
University of Leicester
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Larry J. Paxton
Johns Hopkins University
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Brian J. Anderson
John Hopkins Univ.
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Marc R. Hairston
University of Texas at Dallas
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Benoit Hubert
University of Liege
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Abstract

We propose a mechanism for the formation of the horse-collar auroral configuration during periods of strongly northwards interplanetary magnetic field, invoking the action of dual-lobe reconnection (DLR). Auroral observations are provided by the Imager for Magnetopause-to-Auroras Global Exploration (IMAGE) satellite and spacecraft of the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP). We also use ionospheric flow measurements from DMSP and polar maps of field-aligned currents (FACs) derived from the Active Magnetosphere and Planetary Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE). Sunward convection is observed within the dark polar cap, with antisunwards flows within the horse-collar auroral region, together with the NBZ FAC distribution expected to be associated with DLR. We suggest that newly-closed flux is transported antisunwards and to dawn and dusk within the reverse lobe cell convection pattern associated with DLR, causing the polar cap to acquire a teardrop shape and weak auroras to form at high latitudes. Horse-collar auroras are a common feature of the quiet magnetosphere, and this model provides a first understanding of their formation, resolving several outstanding questions regarding the nature of DLR and the magnetospheric structure and dynamics during northwards IMF. The model can also provide insights into the trapping of solar wind plasma by the magnetosphere and the formation of a low-latitude boundary layer and cold, dense plasma sheet.
Oct 2020Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics volume 125 issue 10. 10.1029/2020JA028567