Dual-spacecraft Reconstruction of a Three-Dimensional Magnetic Flux Rope at the Earth's Magnetopause
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-3-2015
Publication Title
Annales Geophysicae
Department
Thayer School of Engineering
Abstract
We present the first results of a data analysis method, developed by Sonnerup and Hasegawa (2011), for reconstructing three-dimensional (3-D), magnetohydrostatic structures from data taken as two closely spaced satellites traverse the structures. The method is applied to a magnetic flux transfer event (FTE), which was encountered on 27 June 2007 by at least three (TH-C, TH-D, and TH-E) of the five THEMIS probes near the subsolar magnetopause. The FTE was sandwiched between two oppositely directed reconnection jets under a southward interplanetary magnetic field condition, consistent with its generation by multiple X-line reconnection. The recovered 3-D field indicates that a magnetic flux rope with a diameter of ∼3000 km was embedded in the magnetopause. The FTE flux rope had a significant 3-D structure, because the 3-D field reconstructed from the data from TH-C and TH-D (separated by ∼390 km) better predicts magnetic field variations actually measured along the TH-E path than does the 2-D Grad–Shafranov reconstruction using the data from TH-C (which was closer to TH-E than TH-D and was at ∼1250 km from TH-E). Such a 3-D nature suggests that the field lines reconnected at the two X-lines on both sides of the flux rope are entangled in a complicated way through their interaction with each other. The generation process of the observed 3-D flux rope is discussed on the basis of the reconstruction results and the pitch-angle distribution of electrons observed in and around the FTE.
DOI
10.5194/angeo-33-169-2015
Dartmouth Digital Commons Citation
Hasegawa, H.; Sonnerup, B. U. Ö.; Eriksson, S.; and Nakamura, T. K. M., "Dual-spacecraft Reconstruction of a Three-Dimensional Magnetic Flux Rope at the Earth's Magnetopause" (2015). Dartmouth Scholarship. 427.
https://digitalcommons.dartmouth.edu/facoa/427