loading page

Multi Satellite Observation of a Foreshock Bubble Causing an Extreme Magnetopause Expansion
  • +10
  • Niklas Grimmich,
  • Fabio Prencipe,
  • Drew L. Turner,
  • Terry Zixu Liu,
  • Ferdinand Plaschke,
  • Martin Owain Archer,
  • Rumi Nakamura,
  • David Gary Sibeck,
  • Johannes Z. D. Mieth,
  • Hans-Ulrich Auster,
  • Ovidiu Dragos Constantinescu,
  • David Fischer,
  • Werner Magnes
Niklas Grimmich
Institut für Geophysik und extraterrestrische Physik, TU Braunschweig

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Fabio Prencipe
Institut für Geophysik und extraterrestrische Physik, TU Braunschweig
Author Profile
Drew L. Turner
The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
Author Profile
Terry Zixu Liu
University of California Los Angeles
Author Profile
Ferdinand Plaschke
Institut für Geophysik und extraterrestrische Physik, TU Braunschweig
Author Profile
Martin Owain Archer
Imperial College London
Author Profile
Rumi Nakamura
Space Research Institute
Author Profile
David Gary Sibeck
GSFC
Author Profile
Johannes Z. D. Mieth
Technische Universität Braunschweig
Author Profile
Hans-Ulrich Auster
Technische Universitat
Author Profile
Ovidiu Dragos Constantinescu
TU Braunschweig
Author Profile
David Fischer
Institut fuer Weltraumforschung, Austrian Academy of Sciences
Author Profile
Werner Magnes
Institut fuer Weltraumforschung, Austrian Academy of Sciences
Author Profile

Abstract

The interaction of a solar wind discontinuity with the backstreaming particles of the Earth’s ion foreshock can generate hot, tenuous plasma transients such as foreshock bubbles (FB) and hot flow anomalies (HFA). These transients are known to have strong effects on the magnetosphere, distorting the magnetopause (MP), either locally during HFAs or globally during FBs. However, previous studies on the global impact of FBs have not been able to determine whether the response stems directly from the transverse scale size of the phenomenon or its fast motion over the magnetosphere. Here we present the observation of an FB and its impact on the magnetosphere from different spacecraft scattered over the dayside magnetosphere. We are able to constrain the size of the transverse scale of an FB from direct observations to be about 10 $R_\mathrm{E}$. We further suggest that a combination of this scale and the motion of the FB over the MP is responsible for the previously reported global response of the dayside magnetosphere.
09 Sep 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
11 Sep 2023Published in ESS Open Archive