In situ spatiotemporal measurements of the detailed azimuthal substructure of the substorm current wedge

Wild, J. A.; Fazakerley, A. N.; Karlsson, T.; Berthomier, M.; Owen, C. J.; Frey, H. U.; Zhang, Y.; Donovan, E.; Forsyth, C.; Rae, I. J.; Masson, A.; Mutel, R.; Watt, C. E. J.; Ergun, R.; Murphy, K.; Matzka, J.; Stolle, C.

United Kingdom, Canada, Sweden, United States, Netherlands, France, Denmark, Germany

Abstract

The substorm current wedge (SCW) is a fundamental component of geomagnetic substorms. Models tend to describe the SCW as a simple line current flowing into the ionosphere toward dawn and out of the ionosphere toward dusk, linked by a westward electrojet. We use multispacecraft observations from perigee passes of the Cluster 1 and 4 spacecraft during a substorm on 15 January 2010, in conjunction with ground-based observations, to examine the spatial structuring and temporal variability of the SCW. At this time, the spacecraft traveled east-west azimuthally above the auroral region. We show that the SCW has significant azimuthal substructure on scales of 100 km at altitudes of 4000-7000 km. We identify 26 individual current sheets in the Cluster 4 data and 34 individual current sheets in the Cluster 1 data, with Cluster 1 passing through the SCW 120-240 s after Cluster 4 at 1300-2000 km higher altitude. Both spacecraft observed large-scale regions of net upward and downward field-aligned current, consistent with the large-scale characteristics of the SCW, although sheets of oppositely directed currents were observed within both regions. We show that the majority of these current sheets were closely aligned to a north-south direction, in contrast to the expected east-west orientation of the preonset aurora. Comparing our results with observations of the field-aligned current associated with bursty bulk flows (BBFs), we conclude that significant questions remain for the explanation of SCW structuring by BBF-driven "wedgelets." Our results therefore represent constraints on future modeling and theoretical frameworks on the generation of the SCW.

2014 Journal of Geophysical Research (Space Physics)
Cluster 41