
A method for estimating the ring current structure and the electric potential distribution using energetic neutral atom data assimilation
Author(s) -
Nakano S.,
Ueno G.,
Ebihara Y.,
Fok M.C.,
Ohtani S.,
Brandt P. C.,
Mitchell D. G.,
Keika K.,
Higuchi T.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2006ja011853
Subject(s) - ring current , data assimilation , electric field , van allen probes , magnetosphere , physics , computational physics , algorithm , kinetic energy , context (archaeology) , electric potential , ensemble kalman filter , energetic neutral atom , ion , computer science , kalman filter , meteorology , artificial intelligence , classical mechanics , plasma , nuclear physics , van allen radiation belt , voltage , geology , extended kalman filter , paleontology , quantum mechanics
We present a technique for estimating ring current ion distributions and electric potential in the inner magnetosphere by incorporating data from the High‐Energy Neutral Atom (HENA) imager on the IMAGE satellite into a kinetic ring current model in the context of data assimilation. Data assimilation is an approach which adjusts a physics‐based model according to differences with observations. We perform the data assimilation using the particle filter (PF) which is applicable to high‐dimensional systems and observations with relatively low computational cost. In the present technique, the magnetospheric electric potential distribution is represented by the sum of a Volland‐Stern field and a deviation, and the deviation is improved in the assimilation process. The ring current ion distribution is then determined from the electric potential distribution. The method is tested by assimilating artificial data generated by another simulation. The results demonstrate that the ring current ion distribution is successfully reconstructed by the proposed algorithm and that the distorted structures of the electric potential distribution are also well reproduced. An example to illustrate how the present technique could be applied for assimilating a real IMAGE/HENA data set is also demonstrated. This technique provides a useful tool for investigating the global dynamic structure of ring current and electric potential.