Abstract
We have taken a key step in evaluating the importance of ionospheric
outflows relative to electrodynamic coupling in the thermosphere’s
impact on geospace dynamics. We isolated the thermosphere’s material
influence and suppressed electrodynamic feedback in whole geospace
simulations by imposing a time-constant ionospheric conductance in the
ionospheric Ohm’s law in a coupled model that combines the multi-fluid
Lyon-Fedder-Mobarry magnetosphere model with the Thermosphere Ionosphere
Electrodynamic General Circulation Model and the Ionosphere Polar Wind
Model that includes both polar wind and transversely accelerated ion
species. Numerical experiments were conducted for different
thermospheric states parameterized by F10.7 for interplanetary driving
representative of the stream interaction region that swept past Earth on
27 March 2003. We demonstrate that thermosphere through its regulation
of ionospheric outflows influences magnetosphere-ionosphere (MI)
convection and the ion composition, symmetries, x-line perimeter and
magnetic merging of the magnetosphere. Feedback to the
ionosphere-thermosphere from evolving MI convection, and Alfvénic
Poynting fluxes and soft (~ few 100 eV) electron
precipitation originating in the magnetosphere, in turn, modify the
evolving O+ outflow properties. The simulation results
identify a variety of observed magnetospheric features that are
attributable directly to the thermosphere’s material influence:
Asymmetries in O+ outflow fluxes and velocities in the
pre/postnoon low-altitude magnetosphere, dawn/duskside lobes and
pre/postmidnight plasmasheet; O+ distribution of the
plasmasheet; magnetic x-line location and reconnection rate along it.
O+ outflows during solar maximum conditions (high
F10.7) tend to counteract the plasmasheet’s pre/postmidnight asymmetries
caused by the night-to-day gradient in ionospheric Hall conductance.