Abstract
We examine traversais on 20 November 2001 of the equatorial magnetopause boundary layer simultaneously at ∼ 1500 magnetic local time (MLT) by the Geotail spacecraft and at ∼1900 MLT by the Cluster spacecraft, which detected rolled-up MHDscale vortices generated by the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI) under prolonged northward interplanetary magnetic field conditions. Our purpose is to address the excitation process of the KHI, MHD-scale and ion-scale structures of the vortices, and the formation mechanism of the low-latitude boundary layer (LLBL). The observed KH wavelength (>4 × 104 km) is considerably longer man predicted by the linear theory from the thickness (∼1000 km) of the dayside velocity shear layer. Our analyses suggest that the KHI excitation is facilitated by combined effects of the formation of the LLBL presumably through high-latitude magnetopause reconnection and compressional magnetosheath fluctuations on the dayside, and that breakup and/or coalescence of the vortices are beginning around 1900 MLT. Current layers of thickness a few times ion inertia length ∼100 km and of magnetic shear ∼60° existed at the trailing edges of the vortices. Identified in one such current sheet were signatures of local reconnection: Alfvénic outflow jet within a bifurcated current sheet, nonzero magnetic field component normal to the sheet, and field-aligned beam of accelerated electrons. Because of its incipient nature, however, this reconnection process is unlikely to lead to the observed dusk-flank LLBL. It is thus inferred that the flank LLBL resulted from other mechanisms, namely, diffusion and/or remote reconnection unidentified by Cluster. Copyright 2009 by the American Geophysical Union.
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CITATION STYLE
Hasegawa, H., Retinó, A., Vaivads, A., Khotyaintsev, Y., André, M., Nakamura, T. K. M., … Canu, P. (2009). Kelvin-Helmholtz waves at the Earth’s magnetopause: Multiscale development and associated reconnection. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 114(12). https://doi.org/10.1029/2009JA014042
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