Peculiarities of the formation of a thin current sheet in the Earth’s magnetosphere
- Authors: Domrin V.I.1, Malova H.V.1,2, Artemyev A.V.2, Kropotkin A.P.1
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Affiliations:
- Skobeltsyn Research Institute of Nuclear Physics
- Space Research Institute
- Issue: Vol 54, No 6 (2016)
- Pages: 423-437
- Section: Article
- URL: https://journal-vniispk.ru/0010-9525/article/view/153355
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0010952516060034
- ID: 153355
Cite item
Abstract
We investigate the process of the self-consistent formation of a thin current sheet with a thickness close to the ion Larmor gyroradius in the presence of decreasing magnetic field’s normal component Bn. This behavior is typical of the current sheet of the Earth’s magnetospheric tail during geomagnetic substorms. It has been shown that, in a numerical model of the current sheet, based on the particle-in-cell method, the appearance of self-consistent electric field component Ey in the current sheet vicinity can lead to its significant thinning and, eventually, to the formation of a multiscale configuration with a thin current sheet (TCS) in the central region supported by transient particles. The structure of the resulting equilibrium is determined by the initial parameters of the model and by the particle dynamics during the sheet thinning. Under certain conditions, the particle drift in the crossed electric and magnetic fields leads to a significant portion of ions becoming trapped near the neutral sheet and, in this way, to the formation of a wider configuration with an embedded thin current sheet. The population of trapped particles produces diamagnetic negative currents that manifest in the form of negative wings at the periphery of the sheet. Correspondingly, in the direction perpendicular to the sheet, a nonmonotonic coordinate dependence of the magnetic field appears. The mechanisms of the evolution of the current sheet in the Earth’s magnetotail and the formation of a multiscale structure are discussed.
About the authors
V. I. Domrin
Skobeltsyn Research Institute of Nuclear Physics
Author for correspondence.
Email: dmr@dec1.sinp.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Vorob’evy gory, Moscow, 119899
H. V. Malova
Skobeltsyn Research Institute of Nuclear Physics; Space Research Institute
Email: dmr@dec1.sinp.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Vorob’evy gory, Moscow, 119899; Profsoyuznaya st. 84/32, Moscow, 117997
A. V. Artemyev
Space Research Institute
Email: dmr@dec1.sinp.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Profsoyuznaya st. 84/32, Moscow, 117997
A. P. Kropotkin
Skobeltsyn Research Institute of Nuclear Physics
Email: dmr@dec1.sinp.msu.ru
Russian Federation, Vorob’evy gory, Moscow, 119899
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