A survey of 25 years' transpolar voltage data from the SuperDARN radar
network and the Expanding-Contracting Polar Cap model
Abstract
We use 214410 hourly observations of the transpolar voltage,
ΦPC, from 25 years of observations by the SuperDARN
radars, to confirm the central tenet of the Expanding-Contracting Polar
Cap (ECPC) model of ionospheric convection that ΦPC
responds to both dayside and nightside reconnection voltages
(ΦD and ΦN). We show ΦPC
increases at a fixed level of nightside auroral electrojet AL index with
increasingly southward IMF (identifying the well-known effect of
ΦD on ΦPC) but also with increasingly
negative AL at a fixed southward IMF (identifying a distinct effect of
ΦN on ΦPC ). We study the variation of
ΦPC with time elapsed Δt since the IMF last pointed
southward and show that low/large values occur when -AL is small/large.
We have to allow for the fact that at lower numbers of radar echoes,
ne , the matched potential re-analysis technique used to
derive is influenced by the model used: this is done by a sensitivity
study of the threshold of ne required. We show that for
any threshold ΦPC falls to about 15kV for & Δt greater
than about 15 hours giving an upper limit to the viscous-like voltage.
It is shown that both ΦPC and -AL
increase with increased solar wind dynamic pressure
psw , but not as much as the mid-latitude geomagnetic
range index am. We conclude psw increases both
ΦD and ΦN through increasing the
magnetic shear across the relevant current sheet but has a bigger effect
on mid-latitude geomagnetic activity indices via the additional energy
stored in the tail lobes.