Reconstruction Analysis of Global Ionospheric Outflow Patterns

Ionospheric outflow supplies nearly all of the heavy ions observed within the magnetosphere, as well as a significant fraction of the proton density. While much is known about upflow and outflow energization processes, the full global pattern of outflow and its evolution is only known statistically...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of geophysical research. Space physics Vol. 129; no. 5
Main Authors: Liemohn, Michael W., Jahn, Jörg‐Micha, Ilie, Raluca, Ganushkina, Natalia Y., Welling, Daniel T., Elliott, Heather A., Burleigh, Meghan, Doublestein, Kaitlin, Colon‐Rodriguez, Stephanie A., Dredger, Pauline, Valek, Philip W.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Washington Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-05-2024
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Summary:Ionospheric outflow supplies nearly all of the heavy ions observed within the magnetosphere, as well as a significant fraction of the proton density. While much is known about upflow and outflow energization processes, the full global pattern of outflow and its evolution is only known statistically or through numerical modeling. Because of the dominant role of heavy ions in several key physical processes, this unknown nature of the full outflow pattern leads to significant uncertainty in understanding geospace dynamics, especially surrounding storm intervals. That is, global models risk not accurately reproducing the main features of intense space storms because the amount of ionospheric outflow is poorly specified and thus magnetospheric composition and mass loading could be ill‐defined. This study defines a potential mission to observe ionospheric outflow from several platforms, allowing for a reasonable and sufficient reconstruction of the full outflow pattern on an orbital cadence. An observing system simulation experiment is conducted, revealing that four well‐placed satellites are sufficient for reasonably accurate outflow reconstructions. The science scope of this mission could include the following: reveal the global structure of ionospheric outflow; relate outflow patterns to geomagnetic activity level; and determine the spatial and temporal nature of outflow composition. The science objectives could be focused to be achieved with minimal instrumentation (only a low‐energy ion spectrometer to obtain outflow reconstructions) or with a larger scientific scope by including contextual instrumentation. Plain Language Summary Earth's upper atmosphere above 500 km altitude constantly loses charged particles to outer space in a process called ionospheric outflow. This outflow is important for the dynamics of the near‐Earth space environment (“space weather”) yet is poorly understood on a global scale. A mission is needed to observe the global patterns of ionospheric outflow and its relation to space weather driving conditions. The science objectives of such a mission could include not only the reconstruction of global outflow patterns but also the relation of these patterns to geomagnetic activity and the spatial and temporal nature of outflow composition. A study is presented to show that four well‐placed spacecraft would be sufficient for reasonable outflow reconstructions. Key Points A simulation study is conducted to determine the number of spacecraft needed for accurate reconstruction of 2D ionospheric outflow patterns Determining the global pattern of ionospheric outflow is needed to understand the geospace system, especially during geomagnetic storms A potential ionospheric outflow mission concept is defined that could address this unresolved key issue of space physics and space weather
ISSN:2169-9380
2169-9402
DOI:10.1029/2023JA032238