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Peredo et al. 1995
Peredo, M., Slavin, J.A., Mazur, E. and Curtis, S.A. (1995). Three-dimensional position and shape of the bow shock and their variation with Alfvénic, sonic and magnetosonic Mach numbers and interplanetary magnetic field orientation. Journal of Geophysical Research 100: doi: 10.1029/94JA02545. issn: 0148-0227.

A large set of bow shock crossings (i.e., 1392) observed by 17 spacecraft has been used to explore the three-dimensional shape and location of the Earth's bow shock and its dependence on solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) conditions. This study investigates deviations from gas dynamic flow models assoicated with the magnetic terms in the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations. Empirical models predicting the statistical position and shape of the bow shock for arbitrary values of the solar wind pressure, IMF, and Alfv¿nic Mach number (MA) have been derived. Individual crossings have been rotated into aberrated GSE coordinates to remove assymmetries associated with the earth's orbital motion. Variations due to changes in solar wind dynamic pressure have been taken into consideration by normalizing the observed crossing to the average value ⟩p⟨=3.1 nPa. The resulting data set has been used to fit three-dimensional bow shock surfaces and to explore the variations in these surfaces with sonic (MS), Alfv¿nic (MA), and magnetosonic (MMS) mach numbers. Analysis reveals that among the three Mach numbers, MA provides the best ordering of the least square bow shock curves.

The subsolar shock is observed to move Earthward while the flanks flare outward in response to decreasing MA; the net change respresents a 6--10% effect. Variation due to changes in the IMF orientation were investigated by rotating the crossings into geocentric interplanetary medium coordinates. Past studies have suggested that the north-south extent of the bow shock surface exceeds the east-west dimension due to asymmetries in the fast mode Mach cone. This study confirms such a north-south versus east-west asymmetry and quantifies its variation with MS, MA, MMS, and IMF orientation. A 2--7% effect is measured, with the asymmetry being more pronounced at low Mach numbers. Combining the bow shock models with the magnetopause model of Roelof and Sibeck (1993), variations in the magnetosheath thickness at different local times are explored. The ratio of the bow shock size to the magnetopause size at the subsolar point is found to be 1.46; at dawn and dusk, the ratios are found to be 1.89 and 1.93, respectively. The subsolar magnetosheath thickness is used to derive the polytropic index &ggr; according to the empirical relation of Spreiter et al. (1966). The resulting &ggr;=2.3 suggests the empirical formula is inadequate to describe the MHD interaction between the solar wind and the magnetosphere. ¿American Geophysical Union 1995

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Interplanetary Physics, Planetary bow shocks, Magnetospheric Physics, Solar wind/magnetosphere interactions, Magnetospheric Physics, Magnetospheric configuration and dynamics, Interplanetary Physics, Solar wind plasma
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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