EGU23-15810, updated on 04 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-15810
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Modelling the distribution of intermittent magnetic field fluctuations recorded by the Swarm mission in the polar area

Peter Kovacs1, Balazs Heilig2, Zsófia Bebesi1, and Andrea Opitz1
Peter Kovacs et al.
  • 1Wigner Research Centre for Physics, Department of Space Physics and Space Technology, Budapest, Hungary (kovacs.pt@wigner.hu)
  • 2Institute of Earth Physics and Space Science

The almost one decade of operation of ESAs Swarm mission provides an unprecedented opportunity to investigate the appearance of small-scale nonlinear magnetic field irregularities in the topside ionosphere in terms of various climatological and solar-cycle conditions. Within the framework of the EPHEMERIS project supported by ESA we have developed an index for the characterization of the intermittent status of the compressional and tangential (i.e., parallel and perpendicular to the mean background field, respectively) magnetic field fluctuations along the orbits of the Swarm spacecraft triplet. The index is called intermittency index, in short IMI. IMIs are computed for consecutive overlapping segments of Swarm’s magnetic field records by evaluating the deviation of their statistical distribution from the Gaussian distribution. By portraying the global spatial distribution of IMIs, it turns out that the most intensive intermittent fluctuations appear in the polar and equatorial regions, due to auroral field-aligned currents (FAC) and equatorial spread F and plasma bubble phenomena, respectively. Making use of the Adjusted Spherical Cap Harmonic (ASHA) expansion of IMIs, we model the distribution of the intermittent transverse magnetic fluctuations in the polar region in terms of geomagnetic latitude and magnetic local time (MLT), for different geomagnetic activities. We show that the most intermittent fluctuations at high latitudes are distributed about two oval regions that adjoin in the night sector. The ovals expand towards the equator with increasing geomagnetic activity. We argue that the boundaries of the poleward oval coincide with the locations of FACs, while the equatorward oval of intermittent fluctuations (separating from the poleward oval in the noon sector) corresponds to the ionosphere footprint of the plasmasphere boundary, i.e. the plasmapause. These findings are reinforced by independent aurora oval and plasmapause models.

How to cite: Kovacs, P., Heilig, B., Bebesi, Z., and Opitz, A.: Modelling the distribution of intermittent magnetic field fluctuations recorded by the Swarm mission in the polar area, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 23–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-15810, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-15810, 2023.