Superposed epoch analysis applied to large-amplitude travelling convection vortices.
Abstract
For the six months from 1 October 1993 to 1
April 1994 the recordings of the IMAGE magnetometer
network have been surveyed in a search for large-
amplitude travelling convection vortices (TCVs). The
restriction to large amplitudes (>100 nT) was chosen to
ensure a proper detection of evens also during times of
high activity. Readings of all stations of the northern
half of the IMAGE network were employed to check the
consistency of the ground signature with the notation of
a dual-vortex structure moving in an azimuthal direc-
tion. Applying these stringent selection criteria we
detected a total of 19 clear TCV events. The statistical
properties of our selection resemble the expected char-
acteristics of large-amplitude TCVs. New and unexpect-
ed results emerged from the superposed epoch analysis.
TCVs tend to form during quiet intervals embedded in
moderately active periods. The occurrence of events is
not randomly distributed but rather shows a clustering
around a few days. These clusters recur once or twice
every 27 days. Within a storm cycle they show up five to
seven days after the commencement. With regard to
solar wind conditions, we see the events occurring in the
middle of the IMF sector structure. Large-amplitude
TCVs seem to require certain conditions to make solar
wind transients `geoeffective', which have the tendency
to recur with the solar rotation period.
Publisher
Eurepean Geophysical SocietySeries
Annales Geophysicae 16(1998), pp 743-753Metadata
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