Publication | Open Access
The global structure and time evolution of dayside magnetopause surface eigenmodes
41
Citations
29
References
2015
Year
EngineeringSurface WavesSolar ConvectionPlasma PhysicsSolar-terrestrial InteractionMagnetic MaterialsGeophysicsMagnetismGeospace PhysicsAtmospheric SciencePlasma TheoryMagnetohydrodynamicsSpace PhysicEnvironmental MagnetismSolar ActivityPhysicsGlobal StructureTime EvolutionSouthern IonospheresSpace WeatherMagnetospheric PlasmaNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsIonosphereMagnetospheric PhysicsMagnetic PropertyDayside Magnetopause
Abstract Theoretical work and recent observations suggest that the dayside magnetopause may support its own eigenmode, consisting of propagating surface waves which reflect at the northern and southern ionospheres. These magnetopause surface eigenmodes (MSEs) are a potential source of magnetospheric ultralow‐frequency (ULF) waves with frequencies less than 2 mHz. Here we use the Space Weather Modeling Framework to study the magnetospheric response to impulsive solar wind dynamic pressure increases. Waves with 1.8 mHz frequency are excited whose global properties are largely consistent with theoretical predictions for MSE and cannot be explained by other known ULF wave modes. These simulation results lead to two key findings: (1) MSE can be sustained in realistic magnetic field geometries with nonzero flow shear and finite current layer thickness at the magnetopause and (2) MSE can seed the growth of tailward propagating surface waves via the Kelvin‐Helmholtz instability.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1