Strong thermospheric response to the almost undetectable substorm on May 29, 2023

Yongliang Zhang, Qian Wu, Wenbin Wang, Larry Paxton, Robert Schaefer, Dong Lin, Lying Qian, Haonan Wu, Kun Wu, Ying Zou, Martin Connors

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

Abstract

A ground based FPI (Fabry Perot Interferometer) at the Athabasca Observatory detected an unusual strong and storm-like equatorward meridional wind of up to 450 m/s on May 29, 2023, a geomagnetically quiet day (AE < 150 nT, Kp < 1). F18 DMSP SSUSI, a Far Ultra-Violet (FUV) spectrograph imager, observed a long lasting (∼7 h) auroral substorm on the same day. TIMED/GUVI data showed a O/N2 depletion that extended to mid/low latitudes over a limited longitude range in the northern hemisphere. Concurrent SuperDARN measurements indicated strong plasma convection around the substorm location, suggesting a strong local heating (Joule and particle precipitation heating) near the substorm location. This strong and localized heating caused the storm-like response in the thermospheric meridional wind and composition. Furthermore, the FPI also observed a strong zonal wind (up to 180 m/s), which changed its direction from westward to eastward during the substorm. Such a change is due to the competition between the pressure gradient and Coriolis forces. In the Northern Hemisphere, the Coriolis force is westward with an equatorward meridional wind during the substorm; the direction of the pressure gradient force changed from westward to eastward due to changes in the relative locations of the observatory and the substorm. A strong IMF By and periodic variation in the IMF likely provide a favorable upstream condition for continuous energy input from the solar wind to the magnetosphere and/or the release of the stored magnetospheric energy into the thermosphere to drive the long duration substorm and the observed thermospheric changes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106430
JournalJournal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics
Volume268
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar. 2025

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