Title: Inner Magnetospheric Modeling with the Rice Convection Model
1Inner Magnetospheric Modeling with the Rice
Convection Model
- Frank Toffoletto, Rice University
- (with thanks to Stan Sazykin, Dick Wolf, Bob
Spiro, Tom Hill, John Lyon, Mike Wiltberger and
Slava Merkin)
2Outline
- Motivation
- Importance of the inner magnetosphere
- The tool of choice is the Rice Convection Model
(RCM) - Code Descriptions
- RCM
- Coupled LFM RCM
- Physics Examples
- Issues
- Discussion and Conclusion
3Why is the Inner Magnetosphere so important?
- Basic Physical understanding of plasmaspheric and
ring-current dynamics. - We wont understand ring current injection until
we understand the associated electric and
magnetic fields self consistently. - Space Weather
- Many Earth orbiting spacecraft are inner
magnetosphere. - Radiation belts Many space weather effects are
related to to understanding and predicting highly
energetic particles. - For that we need a model of the electric and
magnetic fields. - The low- and mid-latitude ionosphere Disruptions
of the mid- and low-latitude ionosphere seem to
be the most important aspects of space weather at
present, particularly for the military. - Inner magnetospheric electric fields appear to be
the most unknown element in ionospheric modeling
of the subauroral ionosphere.
4What can an Inner magnetospheric model (such as
the RCM) provide?
- Missing physics Global MHD does not include
energy dependent particle drifts, which become
important in the Inner Magnetosphere. - An accurate and reasonable representation of the
Inner Magnetosphere should be able to compute
both Electric and Magnetic fields. - Inputs to ionosphere/thermosphere models, such as
electric fields and particle information.
5RCM Modeling Region
- In the ionosphere, the modeling region includes
the diffuse auroral oval (the boundary lies in
the middle of the auroral oval, shifted somewhat
equatorward from the open-closed field line
boundary). - The modeling region includes the inner/central
plasma sheet, the ring current, and the
plasmasphere. - Region-2 Field-Aligned currents (FAC) connect
magnetosphere and ionosphere.
6RCM Physics Model
- Three pieces
- Drift physics Inner magnetospheric hot plasma
population on closed magnetic field with flow
speeds much slower than thermal and sonic speeds
while maintaining isotropic pitch-angle
distribution function. - Ionospheric coupling perpendicular electrical
currents and electric fields in the
current-conservation approximation. - Field-aligned currents connecting the
magnetosphere and ionosphere assuming charge
neutrality. - Plasma population and magnetic fields are in
quasi-static equilibrium
7RCM Transport Equations
- Take a distribution function and slice it into
invariant energy channels - For each channel, transport is via an advection
equation - where the equations are in non-conservative form,
and in the (?,?) parameter space these fluids
are incompressible - Ionospheric grid, where B-field is assumed
dipolar, Euler potentials can be easily defined
that are (essentially) colatitude and local-time
angle. - (Equations are solved using the CLAWPAK package)
8Equation of Magnetosphere-Ionosphere coupling
- Current conservation equation at ionospheric
hemispheric shell (assumes BisBin) - Vasyliunas Equation (assumes BisBin)
- Combine two together
- High-latitude boundary condition Dirichlet
- Low-latitude boundary condition mixed
with2nd-order spatial derivatives (simple model
of equatorial. electrojet) - Equatorial plane mapping changes in time, grid
there is non-orthogonal. - Equatorial boundary is a circle of constant MLT.
Polar boundary does not coincide with a grid line
and moves in time.
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10Basic RCM Physics
Electrons
Ions
For each species and invariant energy l, h is
conserved along a drift path. Specific Entropy
11Basic RCM Physics- Electric Fields
Inner magnetospheric electric field shielding
Formation of region-2 field-aligned currents
12Limitations to the Conventional RCM Approach to
Calculating Inner-Magnetospheric Electric Field
- The change in magnetic field configuration due to
a northward or southward turning has a large
effect on the inner magnetospheric electric
field. - Hilmer-Voigt or Tsyganenko magnetic field models
cant give a good picture of the time response to
a turning of the IMF. - The potential distribution around the RCMs
high-L boundary must evolve in a complicated way
just after a northward or southward turning hits
the dayside magnetopause. - The time changes in the polar-cap potential
distribution occur simultaneously with the
changes in magnetic configuration. - Magnetic field model is input and not in MHD
force balance with the RCM computed pressures. - A fully coupled MHD/RCM code is an obvious choice
to address these limitations.
13Coupled Modeling Scheme
14Coupled Modeling Scheme
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16Coupling Scheme
LFM
RCM
Coupling exchange time is 1 minute
LFM is nudged by the RCM
17AsideCoupling approach
- In order to minimize code changes, we plan to use
the InterComm library coupling software developed
by Alan Sussman at the University of Maryland - InterComm allows codes to exchange data using
MPI-like calls - It can also handle data exchanges between
parallel codes - For now, the data exchange is done with data and
lock files - The plan is to replace the read/write statements
with InterComm calls - Data is exchanged via a rectilinear intermediate
grid - this allows for relatively fast and simple
field line tracing
18Inner Magnetospheric Shielding
- The inner edge of the plasma sheet tends to
shield the inner magnetosphere from the main
Electric convection field. - This is accomplished by the inner edge of the
plasma sheet coming closer to Earth on the night
side than on the day side. - Causes region-2 currents, which generate a
dusk-to-dawn E field in the inner magnetosphere. - When convection changes suddenly, there is a
temporary imbalance. - For a southward turning, part of the convection
field penetrates to the inner magnetosphere,
until the nightside inner edge moves earthward
enough to re-establish shielding.
19Example of shielding - Standalone RCM
(RCM Runs courtesy of Stan Sazykin)
20RCM LFM Run Setup
- Steady solar wind speed of 400 m/s, particle
density of 5 /cc - Uniform Pederson conductance of 5 Siemens (0 Hall
conductance) - LFM run for 50 minutes without an IMF (from 310
- 400) - IMF turns southward at t 400 hours and
coupling is started
21IMF and Cross polar cap potential for RCM LFM run
22Example of shielding - RCM-LFM run
Region 2 currents
High pVg Blob
23Example of shielding - RCM-LFM run
Low pVg Channels
24Example of undershielding - Standalone RCM
25Example of undershielding - LFM-RCM run
26Example of Overshielding- RCM-LFM run
27Example of Overshielding - Standalone RCM
28Electric fields and pVg
- RCM -LFM exhibits many of the same
characteristics as the standalone RCM, albeit
much noisier - Caveat In order achieve reasonable shielding,
the density coming from the LFM was floored.
Otherwise the LFM plasma temperature in the run
becomes very high as the run progresses, which
effectively destroys shielding. - LFM ionospheric electric field is not the same as
the RCMs, this could be corrected by using a
unified potential solver. - However, the LFM is missing the corotation
electric field - Initially, the LFMs pVg is typically lower than
empirical estimates, later it becomes higher as
the x-line moves tailward.
29Comparisons of Log10(pVg)
LFM
Empirical
Figure courtesy of Xiaoyan Xing and Dick Wolf,
based on Tsyganenko 1996 magnetic field model and
Tsyganenko and Mukai 2003 plasma sheet model.
(IMF BxBy5 nT, Bz -5nT, vsw 400 km/s, nsw5
/cc)
30Comparisons of Log10(pVg)
LFM
Empirical
Figure courtesy of Xiaoyan Xing and Dick Wolf,
based on Tsyganenko 1996 magnetic field model and
Tsyganenko and Mukai 2003 plasma sheet model.
(IMF BxBy5 nT, Bz -5nT, vsw 400 km/s, nsw5
/cc)
31Comparisons of Log10(pVg)
LFM
Empirical
Figure courtesy of Xiaoyan Xing and Dick Wolf,
based on Tsyganenko 1996 magnetic field model and
Tsyganenko and Mukai 2003 plasma sheet model.
(IMF BxBy5 nT, Bz -5nT, vsw 400 km/s, nsw5
/cc)
32Ring Current Injection The effect of the
magnetic field
- Lemon et al (2004 GRL) used a coupled RCM
equilibrium code (RCM-E) to model a ring current
injection. - A long period of adiabatic convection causes a
flow-choking, in which the inner plasma sheet
contains high-pV?, highly stretched flux tubes. - Nothing like an expansion phase or ring-current
injection occurs. - In order to study the inner-magnetospheric
consequences of a non-adiabatic process, Lemon
did an RCM-E run which started from a stretched
configuration, but then moved the nightside RCM
model boundary in to ?10 RE and reduced the
boundary-condition value of pV5/3 along this
boundary within 2 hr of local midnight. - The result was rapid injection of a very strong
ring current. Low content flux tubes filled a
large part of the inner magnetosphere, forming a
new ring current.
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34Do we see similar behavior in the coupled RCM LFM?
35Channels of Low pVg
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37What about the LFM?
- Should produce a more reasonable representation
of the inner magnetospheric pressures, densities
and (hopefully) the magnetic field. - Trapped Ring Current
- The presence of a ring current should encourage
the formation of Region-2 currents - Ideal MHD should produce region-2 currents.
- It is not clear why the global MHD models do not.
- (Actually, higher resolution LFM runs show the
beginnings of region-2 currents.)
38Pressure comparisons at midnight
(RCM values computed along a constant LT in the
ionosphere and then mapped to the equatorial
plane.)
39Weak Region-2 currents form in the LFM
40Effect on the LFM magnetic field
41Problems
42High speed flows do not seem to happen in the
standalone LFM
RCM LFM
Standalone LFM
Log of past runs http//rocco.rice.edu/toffo/lfm
/
43Adding a cold plasmasphere to the RCM did not
help
With plasmasphere
Without plasmasphere
44Density Fix helps some
With fix
45Resolution seems to help - but need longer runs
Low resolution
High resolution
(but with no density fix)
46Summary
- Coupled code runs
- From an RCM viewpoint, results dont look
unreasonable - Inner magnetospheric shielding
- Inner magnetospheric pressures
- Ring current injection
- Although LFM computed pVg are low compared to
empirically computed values
47Summary - 2
- From an LFM viewpoint
- Magnetic field responds, to first order, as one
would expect - Get weak region-2 currents
- But get spectacular outflows from the inner
magnetosphere - Decoupled from the ionosphere
- May be a resolution issue, for a given
resolution, perhaps the code is unable to find
equilibrium solutions that match computed
pressures - Turning off the coupling results in disappearance
of the ring current in 15 minutes - High speed flows seem to be associated with high
plasma betas - It seems we are pushing the MHD in a way that it
was not designed for
48Outlook
- Ultimately we hope to couple to TING/TIEGCM in a
3-way mode - Ionospheric outflow could also be incorporated
- A version of the RCM that includes a non-spin
aligned non-dipolar field is in testing phase
49Extra Slides
50RCM Inputs and Assumptions
- Inputs
- Magnetic field model
- Usually an empirical model
- Initial condition and boundary particle fluxes
- Usually an empirical model
- Loss rates and ionospheric conductivities
- Parameterized empirically-based models
- Electric field model is computed
self-consistently - Ionosphere is a thin conducting (anisotropic)
shell - Electric field in the ionosphere is potential
- Assumptions
- Plasma flows are adiabatic and slow compared to
thermal speeds. - Inertial currents are neglected
- Magnetic field lines are equipotentials
- Pitch-angle distribution of magnetospheric
particles is isotropic - The formalism allows the main calculations to be
done on an 2D ionospheric grid.
51RCM-MHD comparison