The cusp is one of the most dynamic regions in the polar ionosphere. The cusp is located near noon just poleward of the open and closed magnetic field lines of the dayside magnetosphere-ionosphere system, and a variety of energy input processes from the magnetosheath and magnetopause characterize the cusp. Precipitation in the cusp is dominated by soft electrons and energetic protons, and impact ionization and precipitation heating primarily occur in the F-region ionosphere and thermosphere (Hardy et al., 1985;Skjaeveland et al., 2017). The cusp is located at the dayside convection throat, where fast flows transport plasma from closed to open field lines (Moen et al., 2001;Sandholt et al., 2003) and increases Joule heating (Shi et al., 2017). The heating in the cusp increases plasma upflows and thermospheric density (Carlson et al., 2012;Ogawa et al., 2009). In addition to the large-scale quasi-steady convection, pulsed flows propagate poleward in association with localized field-aligned currents. The footprint of the upward FACs is illuminated as discrete auroral arcs, and it is referred to as poleward moving auroral forms (PMAFs) (Oksavik et al., 2004). This transient system is characterized as a flow channel and a wedge-like current system.An important consequence of the cusp dynamics is formation of polar cap patches. During a large southward IMF, the open-closed boundary moves equatorward and photoionized plasma from the sunlit ionosphere becomes an important source of polar cap patches (