Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relation

In order to investigate the causal relationship between magnetic storms and substorms, variations of the mid-latitude geomagnetic indices, ASY (asymmetric part) and SYM (symmetric part), at substorm onsets are examined. Substorm onsets are defined by three different phenomena; (1) a rapid increa...

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Published in:Annales Geophysicae
Main Authors: T. Iyemori, D. R. K. Rao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 1996-06-01
Online Access:https://www.ann-geophys.net/14/608/1996/angeo-14-608-1996.pdf
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author T. Iyemori
D. R. K. Rao
author_facet T. Iyemori
D. R. K. Rao
author_sort T. Iyemori
collection DOAJ
container_title Annales Geophysicae
description In order to investigate the causal relationship between magnetic storms and substorms, variations of the mid-latitude geomagnetic indices, ASY (asymmetric part) and SYM (symmetric part), at substorm onsets are examined. Substorm onsets are defined by three different phenomena; (1) a rapid increase in the mid-latitude asymmetric-disturbance indices, ASY-D and ASY-H, with a shape of so-called `mid-latitude positive bay\'; (2) a sharp decrease in the AL index; (3) an onset of Pi2 geomagnetic pulsation. The positive bays are selected using eye inspection and a pattern-matching technique. The 1-min-resolution SYM-H index, which is essentially the same as the hourly Dst index except in terms of the time resolution, does not show any statistically significant development after the onset of substorms; it tends to decay after the onset rather than to develop. It is suggested by a simple model calculation that the decay of the magnetospheric tail current after substorm onset is responsible for the decay of the Dst field. The relation between the IMF southward turning and the development of the Dst field is re-examined. The results support the idea that the geomagnetic storms and substorms are independent processes; that is, the ring-current development is not the result of the frequent occurrence of substorms, but that of enhanced convection caused by the large southward IMF. A substorm is the process of energy dissipation in the magnetosphere, and its contribution to the storm-time ring-current formation seems to be negligible. The decay of the Dst field after a substorm onset is explained by a magnetospheric energy theorem.
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spelling doaj-art-1db3fb333ede449a9ccb81f736ee52372025-08-19T20:42:15ZengCopernicus PublicationsAnnales Geophysicae0992-76891432-05761996-06-011460861810.1007/s00585-996-0608-3Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relationT. IyemoriD. R. K. RaoIn order to investigate the causal relationship between magnetic storms and substorms, variations of the mid-latitude geomagnetic indices, ASY (asymmetric part) and SYM (symmetric part), at substorm onsets are examined. Substorm onsets are defined by three different phenomena; (1) a rapid increase in the mid-latitude asymmetric-disturbance indices, ASY-D and ASY-H, with a shape of so-called `mid-latitude positive bay\'; (2) a sharp decrease in the AL index; (3) an onset of Pi2 geomagnetic pulsation. The positive bays are selected using eye inspection and a pattern-matching technique. The 1-min-resolution SYM-H index, which is essentially the same as the hourly Dst index except in terms of the time resolution, does not show any statistically significant development after the onset of substorms; it tends to decay after the onset rather than to develop. It is suggested by a simple model calculation that the decay of the magnetospheric tail current after substorm onset is responsible for the decay of the Dst field. The relation between the IMF southward turning and the development of the Dst field is re-examined. The results support the idea that the geomagnetic storms and substorms are independent processes; that is, the ring-current development is not the result of the frequent occurrence of substorms, but that of enhanced convection caused by the large southward IMF. A substorm is the process of energy dissipation in the magnetosphere, and its contribution to the storm-time ring-current formation seems to be negligible. The decay of the Dst field after a substorm onset is explained by a magnetospheric energy theorem.https://www.ann-geophys.net/14/608/1996/angeo-14-608-1996.pdf
spellingShingle T. Iyemori
D. R. K. Rao
Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relation
title Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relation
title_full Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relation
title_fullStr Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relation
title_full_unstemmed Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relation
title_short Decay of the Dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm-substorm relation
title_sort decay of the dst field of geomagnetic disturbance after substorm onset and its implication to storm substorm relation
url https://www.ann-geophys.net/14/608/1996/angeo-14-608-1996.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT tiyemori decayofthedstfieldofgeomagneticdisturbanceaftersubstormonsetanditsimplicationtostormsubstormrelation
AT drkrao decayofthedstfieldofgeomagneticdisturbanceaftersubstormonsetanditsimplicationtostormsubstormrelation