The interplanetary and magnetospheric causes of extreme dB/dt at equatorial locations

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Abstract

The 1 min resolution solar wind and geomagnetic data obtained from seven equatorial/low-latitude stations during four extreme geomagnetic activities are used to investigate the extreme dB/dt perturbations. Simulations of the magnetospheric-ionospheric environment were also performed for varying amplitudes of the solar proton density. Simulations were carried out using the Space Weather Modeling Framework/BATS-R-US + RCM model. Both the observations and simulations demonstrated that the appearance time of the extreme dB/dt perturbations at equatorial stations during disturbed conditions is instantaneous and equitable to those experienced at auroral regions yielding time lags of the order of a few seconds. We find that the rapid dB/dt enhancements are caused by the electric field of magnetospheric current origin, which is being enhanced by solar wind density and ram pressure variations and boosted by the equatorial electrojet. Our results indicate that the solar wind proton density variations could be used as a predictor of extreme dB/dt enhancement at equatorial latitudes.

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APA

Adebesin, B. O., Pulkkinen, A., & Ngwira, C. M. (2016). The interplanetary and magnetospheric causes of extreme dB/dt at equatorial locations. Geophysical Research Letters, 43(22), 11,501-11,509. https://doi.org/10.1002/2016GL071526

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