Pressure-Gradient Current at High Latitude from Swarm Measurements
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Data and Method
3. Results
3.1. Variation of Pressure-Gradient Current with Geomagnetic Activity Level
3.2. Variation of Pressure-Gradient Current with Season
3.3. Variation of Pressure-Gradient Current with Solar Activity
4. Discussion and Conclusions
- During geomagnetically disturbed periods ( nT) the plasma pressure gradients are particularly large around cleft region, where the electron density is changing rapidly. The pressure-gradient current flows around this plasma pressure enhancement region in both hemispheres. The existence of this flow pattern agrees with an increased probability of finding magnetic field variations correlated with plasma density ones around cleft region [9]. Anyway, we remark that additional contributions to the observed magnetic field variations and plasma pressure gradients can be due to incident Alfvén wave [10];
- Regardless of the level of geomagnetic activity, at high latitudes () the flow patterns of the pressure-gradient current identify another region characterized by large plasma pressure gradients, the polar cap. This region, that is observable in both hemispheres, is known to be characterized by the presence of plasma instabilities and the formation of ionospheric irregularities [34]. Additionally, in this region previous studies [11] found a high occurrence rate of magnetic field variations well explained by plasma density variations;
- At lower latitudes in both hemispheres the flow patterns of the pressure-gradient current identify another region where the plasma pressure is changing. In first approximation, it corresponds to the auroral oval and equatorward of the auroral oval on the nigthside. These flow patterns move to lower geomagnetic latitude with increasing geomagnetic activity;
- The pressure-gradient current mean intensity is quite low, around 1 order of magnitude less than the same current observed at low latitudes. In addition, the mean value found in our analysis is lower than that obtained by Laundal et al. [11] at high latitude. The reasons are probably due to the different method used to estimate the currents and to the different size of the window used to evaluate the pressure gradients. We use a window larger than the one used by Laundal et al. [11] and for this reason our pressure gradients are sharper and the pressure-gradient current intensities are smaller.
- Pressure-gradient current shows a clear dependence on solar illumination, and its intensity is influenced by F region annual anomaly. This is probably the reason why the asymmetry summer/winter is more marked in the Southern hemisphere than in the Northern one. Using the diamagnetic effect, Park et al. [9] and Laundal et al. [11] investigated the dependence on season of the ionospheric irregularity occurrences at high latitude. In some ways, our findings are in agreement with those reported by Laundal et al. [11], who found higher occurrence rates of magnetic field variations well explained by plasma pressure in summer than winter. However, the region characterized by a higher probability to find a correspondence between magnetic field and electron density variations is mainly confined in the polar cap in Laundal et al. [11], while the geographic location of our currents is wider. Nevertheless, a more precise comparison is not possible since there is not a distinction between the two hemispheres in Laundal et al. [11]. Conversely, the findings of our study do not seem to support the previous research by Park et al. [9], who reported higher occurrence rates of plasma density irregularities in winter than summer. This is probably due to a different data selection, Park et al. [9] studied the seasonal dependence considering measurements relative to geomagnetically active periods ( nT). We study the seasonal dependence regardless of geomagnetic activity level and in our selection the percentage of data, that satisfies the AE threshold fixed by Park et al. [9], is approximately of ;
- Regardless of geomagnetic and solar activity, the pressure-gradient current intensity is always slightly greater in the Southern hemisphere than in the Northern one;
- The pressure-gradient current intensity decreases with the solar activity level.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lovati, G.; De Michelis, P.; Consolini, G.; Berrilli, F. Pressure-Gradient Current at High Latitude from Swarm Measurements. Remote Sens. 2022, 14, 1428. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14061428
Lovati G, De Michelis P, Consolini G, Berrilli F. Pressure-Gradient Current at High Latitude from Swarm Measurements. Remote Sensing. 2022; 14(6):1428. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14061428
Chicago/Turabian StyleLovati, Giulia, Paola De Michelis, Giuseppe Consolini, and Francesco Berrilli. 2022. "Pressure-Gradient Current at High Latitude from Swarm Measurements" Remote Sensing 14, no. 6: 1428. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14061428
APA StyleLovati, G., De Michelis, P., Consolini, G., & Berrilli, F. (2022). Pressure-Gradient Current at High Latitude from Swarm Measurements. Remote Sensing, 14(6), 1428. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14061428