INFINOA   26585
INSTITUTO DE FISICA DEL NOROESTE ARGENTINO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Polar caps during geomagnetic polarity reversals
Autor/es:
ZOSSI, BRUNO; ELIAS, ANA G; AMIT, HAGAY; FAGRE, MARIANO
Revista:
GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2019 vol. 216 p. 1334 - 1343
ISSN:
0956-540X
Resumen:
Changes in the Earth?s magnetic field can deeply modify the polar caps and auroral zones, which are the regions of most frequent precipitation of energetic particles. The present field is characterized by a dominant dipole plus weaker multipolar components. The field varies greatly in time, with the most drastic changes being polarity reversals that take place on average every ∼200 000 yr. During a polarity transition the field magnitude may diminish to about 10 per cent of its value prior to the reversal due to a decreasing dipolar component and by becoming mostly multipolar in nature. Polar caps depend on the geomagnetic field configuration so changes in their morphology are expected as a consequence of the variation and reversal of this field. We model polar caps? location by considering a superposition of the internal geomagnetic field and a uniform external field and then following the open field lines to the Earth?s surface. Polar caps? location and shape for different magnetic field reversal scenarios are analysed in this work. Two polar caps near the present dipole axis intersection with the Earth?s surface prevail for a dipole decrease to a certain extent, below which the southern hemisphere polar cap moves to mid-latitudes. An axial dipole collapse gives a pair of polar caps both at mid-latitudes of the southern hemisphere, while in a dipole rotation scenario the polar caps reside at the equator. If reversals occur due to an energy cascade from the dipole to higher degrees, more than two polar caps may appear. In our energy cascade scenario, four polar caps at various latitudes of both hemispheres prevail. These results indicate that during reversals auroral zones may reach mid- and low-latitude regions, and the atmosphere may become more vulnerable to the direct effect of energetic particle precipitation. This vulnerability is particularly striking at the southern hemisphere where reversed flux patches appear on the core?mantle boundary and weak intensity characterizes the present field at the Earth?s surface.