A multi-spacecraft survey of magnetic field line draping in the dayside magnetosheath

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Abstract

When the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) encounters the Earth's magnetosphere, it is compressed and distorted. This distortion is known as draping, and plays an important role in the interaction between the IMF and the geomagnetic field. This paper considers a particular aspect of draping, namely how the orientation of the IMF in a plane perpendicular to the Sun-Earth line (the clock angle) is altered by draping in the magnetosheath close to the day-side magnetopause. The clock angle of the magnetosheath field is commonly estimated from the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) measured by upstream monitoring spacecraft either by assuming that the draping process does not significantly alter the clock angle ("perfect draping") or that the change in clock angle is reasonably approximated by a gas dynamic model. In this paper, the magnetosheath clock angles measured during 36 crossings of the magnetopause by the Geotail and Interball-Tail spacecraft are compared to the upstream IMF clock angles measured by the Wind spacecraft. Overall, about 30% of data points exhibit perfect draping within ±10°, and 70% are within 30°. The differences between the IMF and magnetosheath clock angles are not, in general, well-ordered in any systematic fashion which could be accounted for by hydrodynamic draping. The draping behaviour is asymmetric with respect to the y-component of the IMF, and the form of the draping distribution function is dependent on solar wind pressure. While the average clock angle observed in the magnetosheath does reflect the orientation of the IMF to within ∼30° or less, the assumption that the magnetosheath field direction at any particular region of the magnetopause at any instant is approximately similar to the IMF direction is not justified. This study shows that reconnection models which assume laminar draping are unlikely to accurately reflect the distribution of reconnection sites across the dayside magnetopause. © European Geosciences Union 2005.

Figures

  • Fig. 1. An example of the magnetopause crossings used in this paper. The upper two panels show the magnetic field clock angles measured by the Wind and Geotail spacecraft; the Wind data have been timeshifted as described in Sect. 2.2. The third panel shows the transition parameter derived from the Geotail data (see Sect. 2.1) and the estimated time of the magnetopause crossing. In the bottom panel, the clock angle data from both spacecraft are overlaid, and the magnetopause crossing time indicated. This data set is from day 118, 1999.
  • Table 1. Magnetopause-crossing intervals from the Interball-Tail spacecraft.
  • Table 2. Magnetopause-crossing intervals from the Geotail spacecraft.
  • Fig. 2. Clock angles measured near magnetopause, and angular differences from perfect draping, for unsmoothed data. The mean position of the data points (in GSM coordinates) within each 2 RE bin is shown as a filled circle, and the mean clock angle is indicated by a line. The standard deviation of the clock angles within each bin is indicated by an arc of total angular extent equal to twice the standard deviation. The colour coding indicates the difference between the mean clock angle measured near the magnetopause, and that observed in the corresponding upstream IMF data: green for a difference of less than 30◦, blue for a difference between 30◦ and 90◦, and red where the difference is greater than 90◦. The histograms show the distribution of angular differences over the entire magnetopause (“All”), and the subsolar, flank, and high latitude regions. The extent of these regions is shown on the magnetopause plot.
  • Table 3. Distribution of absolute angular differences between the clock angle of the magnetosheath field measured within 2 RE of the magnetopause and the time-shifted IMF clock angle. The subsolar region is defined by |y|<5 RE and |z|<5 RE , the high-latitude regions, defined by |z|≥5 RE , and the equatorial flanks, defined by |y|≥5 RE and |z|<5 RE . N is the total number of points in the magnetopausecrossing data. The mean and standard deviation of the angular difference are shown in the columns “mean” and “s.d.”, and the last six columns show the percentage of data points in each of six ranges of angular difference.
  • Table 4. Distribution of angular differences, for data subject to 5-min boxcar smoothing. Format as in Table 3.
  • Table 5. Distribution of angular differences in the Northward IMF case (IMF clock angle between −15◦ and 15◦). Format as in Table 3.
  • Table 6. Distribution of angular differences in the Southward IMF case (IMF clock angle between −165◦ and 165◦). Format as in Table 3.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Coleman, I. J. (2005). A multi-spacecraft survey of magnetic field line draping in the dayside magnetosheath. Annales Geophysicae, 23(3), 885–900. https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-23-885-2005

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