Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
Further evidence for the role of magnetotail current shape in substorm initiation. / Kubyshkina, M.; Tsyganenko, N.; Semenov, V.; Kubyshkina, D.; Partamies, N.; Gordeev, E.
In: EARTH PLANETS AND SPACE, Vol. 67, No. 139, 2015, p. None.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Further evidence for the role of magnetotail current shape in substorm initiation
AU - Kubyshkina, M.
AU - Tsyganenko, N.
AU - Semenov, V.
AU - Kubyshkina, D.
AU - Partamies, N.
AU - Gordeev, E.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - © 2015 Kubyshkina et al.Substorm initiation still remains an unsolved problem, even though there is a consensus among most researchers that its main stages include dayside reconnection and substorm expansion. Dayside reconnection results in magnetotail flux buildup to a certain critical level, after which [or after the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) Bz turns northward] the substorm expansion begins. One problem with the above scenario is that the critical amount of magnetic flux differs from one substorm to another, and not every northward turning of the IMF Bz triggers a substorm. We suggest that an important factor in substorm dynamics may be the variable shape and alignment of the magnetospheric tail current sheet, which bends and warps in response to diurnal/seasonal changes of the Earth's dipole tilt angle and also in response to more rapid changes of the solar wind flow direction. Both of these factors may be important, if one assumes that the deformed current sheet becomes unstable at lower values
AB - © 2015 Kubyshkina et al.Substorm initiation still remains an unsolved problem, even though there is a consensus among most researchers that its main stages include dayside reconnection and substorm expansion. Dayside reconnection results in magnetotail flux buildup to a certain critical level, after which [or after the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) Bz turns northward] the substorm expansion begins. One problem with the above scenario is that the critical amount of magnetic flux differs from one substorm to another, and not every northward turning of the IMF Bz triggers a substorm. We suggest that an important factor in substorm dynamics may be the variable shape and alignment of the magnetospheric tail current sheet, which bends and warps in response to diurnal/seasonal changes of the Earth's dipole tilt angle and also in response to more rapid changes of the solar wind flow direction. Both of these factors may be important, if one assumes that the deformed current sheet becomes unstable at lower values
U2 - 10.1186/s40623-015-0304-1
DO - 10.1186/s40623-015-0304-1
M3 - Article
VL - 67
SP - None
JO - Earth, Planets and Space
JF - Earth, Planets and Space
SN - 1343-8832
IS - 139
ER -
ID: 3944925