SM13D-2539
Dipolarization fronts as earthward propagating flux ropes: A three-dimensional global hybrid simulation

Monday, 14 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
San Lu1, Quanming Lu2, Yu Lin3, Xueyi Wang4, Yasong Ge5, Rongsheng Wang1, Meng Zhou6, Huishan Fu7, Can Huang1, Mingyu Wu1 and Shui Wang1, (1)University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China, (2)USTC University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China, (3)Auburn University at Montgomery, Auburn, AL, United States, (4)Auburn University at Montgomery, Montgomery, AL, United States, (5)IGG Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China, (6)Nanchang University, Nanchang, China, (7)Beihang University, Space Science Institute, School of Astronautics, Beijing, China
Abstract:
Dipolarization fronts (DFs) as earthward propagating flux ropes (FRs) in the Earth’s magnetotail are presented and investigated with a three-dimensional (3-D) global hybrid simulation for the first time. In the simulation, several small-scale earthward propagating FRs are found to be formed by multiple X-line reconnection in the near-tail. During their earthward propagation, the magnetic field Bz of the FRs becomes highly asymmetric due to the imbalance of the reconnection rates between the multiple X-lines. At the later stage, when the FRs approach the near-Earth dipole-like region, the anti-reconnection between the southward/negative Bz of the FRs and the northward geomagnetic field leads to the erosion of the southward magnetic flux of the FRs, which further aggravates the Bz asymmetry. Eventually, the FRs merge into the near-Earth region through the anti-reconnection. These earthward propagating FRs can fully reproduce the observational features of the DFs, e.g., a sharp enhancement of Bz preceded by a smaller amplitude Bz dip, an earthward flow enhancement, the presence of the electric field components in the normal and dawn-dusk directions, and ion energization. Our results show that the earthward propagating FRs can be used to explain the DFs observed in the magnetotail. The thickness of the DFs is on the order of several ion inertial lengths, and the electric field normal to the front is found to be dominated by the Hall physics. During the earthward propagation from the near-tail to the near-Earth region, the speed of the FR/DFs increases from ~150km/s to ~1000km/s. The FR/DFs can be tilted in the GSM xy plane with respect to the y (dawn-dusk) axis and only extend several RE in this direction. Moreover, the structure and evolution of the FRs/DFs are non-uniform in the dawn-dusk direction, which indicates that the DFs are essentially 3-D.