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Large-Scale Dynamics of the Magnetospheric Boundary: Comparisons between Global MHD Simulation Results and ISTP Observations

Authors :
Berchem, J
Raeder, J
Ashour-Abdalla, M
Frank, L. A
Paterson, W. R
Ackerson, K. L
Kokubun, S
Yamamoto, T
Lepping, R. P
Source :
Geospace Mass and Energy Flow: Results from the International Solar-Terrestrial Physics Program.
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1998.

Abstract

Understanding the large-scale dynamics of the magnetospheric boundary is an important step towards achieving the ISTP mission's broad objective of assessing the global transport of plasma and energy through the geospace environment. Our approach is based on three-dimensional global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations of the solar wind-magnetosphere- ionosphere system, and consists of using interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) and plasma parameters measured by solar wind monitors upstream of the bow shock as input to the simulations for predicting the large-scale dynamics of the magnetospheric boundary. The validity of these predictions is tested by comparing local data streams with time series measured by downstream spacecraft crossing the magnetospheric boundary. In this paper, we review results from several case studies which confirm that our MHD model reproduces very well the large-scale motion of the magnetospheric boundary. The first case illustrates the complexity of the magnetic field topology that can occur at the dayside magnetospheric boundary for periods of northward IMF with strong Bx and By components. The second comparison reviewed combines dynamic and topological aspects in an investigation of the evolution of the distant tail at 200 R(sub E) from the Earth.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geophysics

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Geospace Mass and Energy Flow: Results from the International Solar-Terrestrial Physics Program
Notes :
NAG5-2371, , NAGw-1100, , NAGw-4543, , NAGw-4541
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19990031964
Document Type :
Report