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Ann. Geophys., 16, 1380-1391, 1998
www.ann-geophys.net/16/1380/1998/
© European Geosciences Union 1998


The thermospheric effects of a rapid polar cap expansion

D. W. Idenden
School of Mathematics and Statistics, The Hicks Building, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, S3 7RH, UK

Abstract. In a previous publication we used results from a coupled thermosphere-ionosphere-plasmasphere model to illustrate a new mechanism for the formation of a large-scale patch of ionisation arising from a rapid polar cap expansion. Here we describe the thermospheric response to that polar cap expansion, and to the ionospheric structure produced. The response is dominated by the energy and momentum input at the dayside throat during the expansion phase itself. These inputs give rise to a large-scale travelling atmospheric disturbance (TAD) that propagates both antisunward across the polar cap and equatorward at speeds much greater than both the ion drifts and the neutral winds. We concentrate only on the initially poleward travelling disturbance. The disturbance is manifested in the neutral temperature and wind fields, the height of the pressure level surfaces and in the neutral density at fixed heights. The thermospheric effects caused by the ionospheric structure produced during the expansion are hard to discern due to the dominating effects of the TAD.

Key words. Ionosphere (ionosphere ยท atmosphere interaction; modeling and forecasting; plasma convection).


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Citation: Idenden, D. W.: The thermospheric effects of a rapid polar cap expansion, Ann. Geophys., 16, 1380-1391, 1998.   Bibtex   EndNote   Reference Manager