Persistent pressure gradient as a driver of the substorm current wedge:
A statistical study
Abstract
The substorm current wedge (SCW) is believed to be driven by pressure
gradients and vortices associated with fast flows. Therefore, it is
expected that relevant observations are organized by the SCW’s central
meridian, which cannot be determined using in-situ observations. This
study takes advantage of the SCW inversion technique, which provides
essential information about an SCW (e.g., location and strengths of
field-aligned currents (FACs) and investigates the generation mechanisms
of the SCW. First, we have found good temporal and spatial correlations
between earthward flows and substorm onsets identified using the
midlatitude positive bay (MPB) index. Over half of the flows are
observed within 10 minutes of substorm onsets. Most flows (85%) were
located inside the SCW between its upward and downward FACs. Second,
superposed epoch analysis (SPEA) shows that the onset-associated flow
velocity has a flow-scale (3-min) peak, while the equatorial thermal
pressure has a substorm-scale (>30 min) enhancement and a
trend similar to the westward electrojet and FACs in the SCW. Third, the
pressure gradient calculated using in-situ observations is well
organized in the SCW frame and points toward the SCW’s central meridian.
These facts suggest that the SCW is likely sustained by substorm-scale
pressure gradient rather than flow-scale flow vortices. The nonalignment
between the pressure gradient and flux tube volume could generate an SCW
with a quadrupole FAC pattern, similar to that seen in global MHD and
RCM-E simulations. Their magnetic effects on the ground and
geosynchronous orbit resemble a classic one-loop SCW.