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Direct penetration of the interplanetary electric field to low geomagnetic latitudes and its effect on magnetotelluric sounding

Authors :
Oliver Ritter
Hermann Lühr
Dirk Brändlein
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 117
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2012.

Abstract

[1] Long-term monitoring of geoelectromagnetic fields, recorded with a network of nine stations covering an area of approximately 25,000 km2at low geomagnetic latitudes in northern Chile, reveals systematic and seasonally modulated variations of geomagnetic field properties. The observed seasonal variation affects almost exclusively the east-west magnetic field component for periods between 100 and 3000 s. The ground-based measurements of magnetic and electric fields show statistically significant coherences with the interplanetary electric field derived from solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field data of the Advanced Composition Explorer satellite. The interplanetary electric field (IEF) penetrates the polar ionosphere from where it propagates toward equatorial latitudes by waveguide transmission, with ionosphere and solid Earth acting as conducting boundaries. Signal coherence between IEF and ground data peaks at periods of approximately 90 min and up to the four harmonics. Coherence values reach 0.4 at these periods and depend on the electromagnetic field component. They vary with season and local time. Transfer functions computed between IEF and ground-based electric and magnetic fields show local maxima at similar periods (90 min and harmonics). The coupling between the east-west magnetic field component and the IEF shows significant seasonal variability, much larger than the other electromagnetic field components. We conclude that the IEF drives primarily a global circuit of Pedersen currents in the ionosphere. Resulting time-varying magnetic fields induce electric currents in the ground. Related ground-based magnetic (primarily north-south) and electric (primarily east-west) signals vary coherently at all local times and seasons. Conversely, magnetic signals caused by the IEF-driven Hall currents depend much on local time and season. We show for the first time that these ionospheric Hall currents cause no induction in the ground, but they generate magnetic signatures that are confined to the waveguide between ionosphere and Earth's surface.

Details

ISSN :
01480227
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........124168945378a06354610f901563dbaa