Abstract. Using three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulations, we investigate the propagation of low-entropy magnetic flux tubes ("bubbles") in the magnetotail. Our simulations address fundamental properties of the propagation and dynamics of such flux tubes rather than the actual formation process. We find that the early evolution, after a sudden reduction of pressure and entropy on a localized flux tube, is governed by re-establishing the balance of the total pressure in the dawn-dusk and north-south directions through compression on a time scale less than about 20 s for the typical magnetotail. The compression returns the equatorial pressure to its original unperturbed value, due to the fact that the magnetic field contributes only little to the total pressure, while farther away from the equatorial plane the magnetic field compression dominates. As a consequence the pressure is no longer constant along a flux tube. The subsequent evolution is characterized by earthward propagation at speeds of the order of 200-400 km/s, depending on the initial amount of depletion and the cross-tail extent of a bubble. Simple acceleration without depletion does not lead to significant earthward propagation. It hence seems that both the entropy reduction and the plasma acceleration play an important role in the generation of fast plasma flows and their propagation into the near tail. Earthward moving bubbles are found to be associated with field-aligned current systems, directed earthward on the dawnward edge and tailward on the duskward edge. This is consistent with current systems attributed to observed bursty bulk flows and their auroral effects.
[1] An examination of the magnetic field and plasma observed by the inner THEMIS-D spacecraft (P3) close to the equatorial plane at ∼11R E at local midnight reveals the occurrence of mirror-mode structures. These structures have the same characteristic waveform seen in other regions. The examination of the mirror-mode instability shows that inside these structures the threshold of mirror instability is marginally reached, while the surrounding plasma is mirror stable. The observed mirror structures occur in the dipolarized magnetic field following a substorm-related dipolarization. It is found that after the dipolarization front, the local ions become more anisotropic and initial magnetic holes form inside this anisotropic plasma before the fully-fledged mirror structures are observed. The ions become less anisotropic afterward, but the strong field depression in the magnetic holes enhances the effective plasma beta so that the mirror instability threshold is marginally reached. Thus, the dipolarization process provides the large-amplitude magnetic field fluctuations and the anisotropic plasma environment for mirror structures to grow. The isolated large-amplitude mirror-mode structures survive in the mirror-stable plasma even through the plasma becomes less anisotropic. It is also found that the width of magnetotail mirror-structures is smaller than one gyroradius of a plasma sheet proton, which is different from the width of mirror structures in other regions. These mirror structures appear to have a strong correlation with electron anisotropy changes. These observations suggest that electron kinetics may also play a role during the growth and saturation of mirror instability in the near-Earth tail.
We use Open Geospace General Circulation Model global MHD simulations to study the nightside magnetospheric, magnetotail, and ionospheric responses to interplanetary (IP) fast forward shocks. Three cases are presented in this study: two inclined oblique shocks, hereafter IOS-1 and IOS-2, where the latter has a Mach number twice stronger than the former. Both shocks have impact angles of 30• in relation to the Sun-Earth line. Lastly, we choose a frontal perpendicular shock, FPS, whose shock normal is along the Sun-Earth line, with the same Mach number as IOS-1. We find that, in the IOS-1 case, due to the north-south asymmetry, the magnetotail is deflected southward, leading to a mild compression. The geomagnetic activity observed in the nightside ionosphere is then weak. On the other hand, in the head-on case, the FPS compresses the magnetotail from both sides symmetrically. This compression triggers a substorm allowing a larger amount of stored energy in the magnetotail to be released to the nightside ionosphere, resulting in stronger geomagnetic activity. By comparing IOS-2 and FPS, we find that, despite the IOS-2 having a larger Mach number, the FPS leads to a larger geomagnetic response in the nightside ionosphere. As a result, we conclude that IP shocks with similar upstream conditions, such as magnetic field, speed, density, and Mach number, can have different geoeffectiveness, depending on their shock normal orientation.
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