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Detailed Reference Information
Huang et al. 2005
Huang, C.-M., Richmond, A.D. and Chen, M.-Q. (2005). Theoretical effects of geomagnetic activity on low-latitude ionospheric electric fields. Journal of Geophysical Research 110: doi: 10.1029/2004JA010994. issn: 0148-0227.

The influence of geomagnetic activity on middle- and low-latitude thermospheric winds and ionospheric electric fields is investigated using model results from the National Center for Atmospheric Research Thermosphere-Ionosphere-Electrodynamics General Circulation Model. Model runs are made for different levels of geomagnetic activity. Model results show that the equatorward ionospheric currents produced by disturbance winds develop positive charge accumulation at low latitudes that maximizes in the premidnight sector. The local time of maximum electric potential perturbation depends significantly on universal time so that the local time of reversal of the equatorial zonal perturbation electric field varies with longitude by 2 to 3 hours, depending on the intensity of geomagnetic activity. The westward perturbation electric field in the postsunset period indicates that stronger geomagnetic activity will produce a lower driven height of the evening F region. After geomagnetic activity ceases, model results show that the zonal disturbance winds can last for many days in the postrecovery period, while the meridional disturbance winds decay more rapidly. The long-lasting zonal winds, through the Pedersen currents they drive, help maintain meridional disturbance potential drops that decay much more slowly than the zonal disturbance potential drops after the activity ceases.

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Ionosphere, Electric fields, Ionosphere, Equatorial ionosphere, Ionosphere, Ionospheric disturbances, Ionosphere, Ionospheric dynamics, ionospheric disturbance, geomagnetic activity, electrodynamics, electric field penetration
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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