z-logo
Premium
Theory of Cowling channel formation by reflection of shear Alfven waves from the auroral ionosphere
Author(s) -
Yoshikawa A.,
Amm O.,
Vanhamäki H.,
Nakamizo A.,
Fujii R.
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.50514
Subject(s) - ionosphere , physics , electric field , polarization (electrochemistry) , magnetosphere , hall effect , computational physics , geophysics , conductance , magnetic field , condensed matter physics , quantum mechanics , chemistry
We present the first complete formulation of the coupling between the ionospheric horizontal currents (including Hall currents) and the field‐aligned currents (FAC) via shear Alfven waves, which can describe the formation of a Cowling channel without any a priori parameterization of the secondary (Hall polarization) electric field strength. Our theory reorganizes the Cowling channel by “primary” and “secondary” fields. Until now there are no theoretical frameworks, which can derive these separated components from observed or given total conductance, electric field, and FAC distributions alone. But when a given incident where Alfven wave is considered as the driver, the reflected wave can be uniquely decomposed into the primary and secondary components. We show that the reflected wave can, depending on actual conditions, indeed carry FAC that connect to divergent Hall currents. With this new method, we can identify how large the secondary electric field becomes, how efficiently the divergent Hall current is closed within the ionosphere, and how much of the Hall current continues out to the magnetosphere as FAC. In typical ionospheric situations, only a small fraction of FAC is connected to Hall currents at conductance gradients, i.e., the secondary field is relatively strong. But when conductances are relatively low compared with Alfven conductance and/or horizontal scales smaller than ~10 km, the Hall FAC may become significant.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here