Comment on “The night when the auroral and equatorial ionospheres converged” by Martinis, C., J. Baumgardner, M. Mendillo, J. Wroten, A. Coster, and L. Paxton

Intense OI 630.0 nm emission depletions were detected over Mexico by an all‐sky imager during the main phase of the geomagnetic storm on 1 June 2013 (minimum Dst index: −119 nT). Those emission depletions were interpreted to be associated with equatorial plasma bubbles. If bubbles were responsible f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geophysical research. Space physics 2016-10, Vol.121 (10), p.10,599-10,607
Hauptverfasser: Kil, Hyosub, Miller, Ethan S., Jee, Geonhwa, Kwak, Young‐Sil, Zhang, Yongliang, Nishioka, Michi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Intense OI 630.0 nm emission depletions were detected over Mexico by an all‐sky imager during the main phase of the geomagnetic storm on 1 June 2013 (minimum Dst index: −119 nT). Those emission depletions were interpreted to be associated with equatorial plasma bubbles. If bubbles were responsible for those middle‐latitude emission depletions, they would have been extreme bubbles which extended over 40° magnetic latitudes and 7000 km in altitude at the magnetic equator. However, a few factors challenge this interpretation. First, the emission depletions detected over Mexico showed westward drift, whereas the equatorial ionosphere including bubbles drifted eastward on that night. Second, the middle‐latitude emission depletions were tilted westward with respect to the geographic meridian, but the westward tilt of bubbles was not identified. Third, the growth of bubbles was not evident when the middle‐latitude emission depletions grew. The westward tilt and westward propagation of the middle‐latitude emission depletions are consistent with the characteristics of medium‐scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (MSTIDs) observed over the United States on that night. Thus, the emission depletions over Mexico can be interpreted to be the signature of MSTIDs. Key Points The source of OI 630.0 nm emission depletions over Mexico on 1 June 2013 was investigated The emission depletions were interpreted to be equatorial plasma bubbles, but this interpretation is challenged by a few uncertainties The characteristics of the emission depletions could be explained with MSTIDs observed over the United States on that night
ISSN:2169-9380
2169-9402
DOI:10.1002/2016JA022662