Publication Date:
2018-12-08
Description:
The effect of electromagnetic variability on cusp-region ionosphere-thermosphere heating is examined. The study is motivated by observed correlations between anomalous thermospheric density enhancements at F region altitudes and small-scale field-aligned currents, previously interpreted as evidence of ionospheric Alfvén resonator modes. Height-integrated and height-dependent heating rates for Alfvén waves incident from the magnetosphere at frequencies from 0.05 to 2 Hz and perpendicular wavelengths from 0.5 to 20 km have been calculated. The velocity well in Alfvén speed surrounding the F region plasma density maximum facilitates energy deposition by slowing, trapping, and intensifying resonant waves. The Alfvénic Joule heating rate maximizes at the resulting resonances. F region Joule heating resulting from quasistatic and Alfvénic variability with the same root-mean-square amplitude in the F region are shown to be comparable. At the same time, Alfvénic variability deposits little electromagnetic power in the E region, whereas quasistatic variability greatly enhances E region heating. When measured electric and magnetic fields are used to constrain the amplitude and spectral content of superposed Alfvén waves incident from the magnetosphere, the calculated F region heating rate ranges from 5 to 10 nW/m3.
Print ISSN:
2169-9380
Electronic ISSN:
2169-9402
Topics:
Geosciences
,
Physics
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