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Orientation of solar wind dynamic pressure phase fronts
Author(s) -
Jackel Brian J.,
Cameron Taylor,
Weygand James M.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9402
pISSN - 2169-9380
DOI - 10.1002/jgra.50183
Subject(s) - azimuth , solar wind , physics , ecliptic , interplanetary magnetic field , orientation (vector space) , phase (matter) , geodesy , heliospheric current sheet , geophysics , wind direction , plane (geometry) , computational physics , optics , geology , geometry , magnetic field , wind speed , meteorology , mathematics , quantum mechanics
Orientation of structures in the solar wind plays an important role when attempting to use upstream observations at L1 for prediction of subsequent conditions near the Earth. In this study, the relationship between solar wind dynamic pressure forcing and geosynchronous magnetic field response is used to determine a very large set of lagged correlations between the ACE and GOES satellites. Effects due to tilted solar wind structures are explored using the dispersion of arrival times relative to a simple phase plane model. Assuming that structure phase‐front normal vectors were located in the GSE‐ xy plane, we found a characteristic azimuth of 15°. Similar analysis carried out with velocity scaling according to the Parker spiral model did not produce an improved fit. Binning by average interplanetary magnetic field (IMF)B → orientation produced a clear pattern in characteristic azimuth, with phase‐front normals perpendicular to both the predominant Parker spiral orientation and the less common ortho‐spiral configuration. An empirical relationshipφn ̂= − 4 5 ° sin ( 2 φ B) was found to predict phase‐front normal azimuth over the entire range of observed IMF azimuths. The effects of lateral displacement from the Sun‐Earth line in the GSE‐ z direction are comparable to those for GSE‐ y , indicating that solar wind structures are often significantly inclined with respect to the ecliptic plane.

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