Publication | Open Access
SuperDARN Observations During Geomagnetic Storms, Geomagnetically Active Times, and Enhanced Solar Wind Driving
60
Citations
57
References
2019
Year
Geomagnetically Active TimesEngineeringSolar ConvectionSolar-terrestrial InteractionSolar PhysicEarth ScienceGeophysicsGeospace PhysicsAtmospheric ScienceSpace PhysicSuperdarn ObservationsGeomagnetic StormsPlanetary MagnetosphereSolar ActivityRadar BackscatterMagnetic LatitudeSpace WeatherSunspot StudiesAstrophysicsRadarSuperdarn RadarsIonosphereMagnetospheric Physics
Abstract The Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) was built to study ionospheric convection at Earth and has in recent years been expanded to lower latitudes to observe ionospheric flows over a larger latitude range. This enables us to study extreme space weather events, such as geomagnetic storms, which are a global phenomenon, on a large scale (from the pole to magnetic latitudes of 40°). We study the backscatter observations from the SuperDARN radars during all geomagnetic storm phases from the most recent solar cycle and compare them to other active times to understand radar backscatter and ionospheric convection characteristics during extreme conditions and to discern differences specific to geomagnetic storms and other geomagnetically active times. We show that there are clear differences in the number of measurements the radars make, the maximum flow speeds observed, and the locations where they are observed during the initial, main, and recovery phase. We show that these differences are linked to different levels of solar wind driving. We also show that when studying ionospheric convection during geomagnetically active times, it is crucial to consider data at midlatitudes, as we find that during 19 % of storm time the equatorward boundary of the convection is located below 50° of magnetic latitude.
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