The Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) has been operating as an international co-operative organization for over 10 years. The network has now grown so that the fields of view of its 18 radars cover the majority of the northern and southern hemisphere polar ionospheres. SuperDARN has been successful in addressing a wide range of scientific questions concerning processes in the magnetosphere, ionosphere,
Patches of ionization are common in the polar ionosphere, where their motion and associated density gradients give variable disturbances to high-frequency (HF) radio communications, over-the-horizon radar location errors, and disruption and errors to satellite navigation and communication. Their formation and evolution are poorly understood, particularly under disturbed space weather conditions. We report direct observations of the full evolution of patches during a geomagnetic storm, including formation, polar cap entry, transpolar evolution, polar cap exit, and sunward return flow. Our observations show that modulation of nightside reconnection in the substorm cycle of the magnetosphere helps form the gaps between patches where steady convection would give a "tongue" of ionization (TOI).
[1] In past calculations of convective velocities from Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) HF radar observations, the refractive index in the scattering region has not been taken into account, and therefore the inferred ionospheric velocities may be underestimated. In light of the significant contribution by SuperDARN to ionospheric and magnetospheric research, it is important to refine the velocity determination. The refractive index in the ionosphere at SuperDARN observation F region altitudes has typical values between 0.8 and close to unity. In the scattering region, where conditions are more extreme, the index of refraction may be much lower. A simple application of Snell's law in spherical coordinates (Bouguer's law) suggests that a proxy for the index of refraction at the scattering location can be determined by measuring the elevation angle of the returned ionospheric radar signal. Using this approximation for refractive index, the Doppler velocity calculation can be refined for each SuperDARN ionospheric echo, using the elevation angles obtained from the SuperDARN interferometer data. A velocity comparison of DMSP and SuperDARN observations has revealed that the SuperDARN speeds were systematically lower than the DMSP speeds. A linear regression analysis of the velocity comparisons found a best fit slope of 0.74. When the elevation angle data were used to estimate refractive index, the best fit slope rose 12% to 0.83. As most SuperDARN radars employ an interferometer antenna array for elevation angle measurements, the improvement in velocity estimates can be done routinely using the method outlined in this paper.
Coupling functions are combinations of interplanetary parameters that are used to quantitatively predict terrestrial space weather indicators and indices. They should have a linear relationship with the index or measured parameter that they aim to predict. There are a great many combinations that have been proposed and tested since correlations between interplanetary parameters measured by spacecraft and terrestrial disturbance indices became possible (Arnoldy, 1971). The concept of a combination of parameters capturing their net influence (i.e., a coupling function) grew out of the PhD studies of Perreault (1974). An excellent review of the development of coupling functions, the theories behind them and the empirical fits, has been given by McPherron et al. (2015). Some coupling functions are theoretical in origin, whereas others are from empirical fits to data. However, in truth all are, to some degree, a hybrid of the two approaches. This is because theoretical coupling functions almost always have to employ some coefficients, exponents, or branching ratios that are defined empirically. Conversely, empirical coupling functions employ parameter selections and formulations that are based on theory. We also note the role of numerical global simulations in developing coupling functions. These have the advantage of
We present unique coordinated observations of the dayside auroral oval, polar cap, and nightside auroral oval by three all-sky imagers, two Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) radars, and Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP)-17. This data set revealed that a dayside poleward moving auroral form (PMAF) evolved into a polar cap airglow patch that propagated across the polar cap and then nightside poleward boundary intensifications (PBIs). SuperDARN observations detected fast antisunward flows associated with the PMAF, and the DMSP satellite, whose conjunction occurred within a few minutes after the PMAF initiation, measured enhanced low-latitude boundary layer precipitation and enhanced plasma density with a strong antisunward flow burst. The polar cap patch was spatially and temporally coincident with a localized antisunward flow channel. The propagation across the polar cap and the subsequent PBIs suggests that the flow channel originated from dayside reconnection and then reached the nightside open-closed boundary, triggering localized nightside reconnection and flow bursts within the plasma sheet.
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