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Earth’s Dynamic Magnetic Field: The State of the Art Comprehensive Model Terence J. Sabaka Geodynamics Branch NASA/GSFC with special thanks to Nils Olsen Danish Space Research Institute
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Outline Introduction Data Parameterization Estimation Results Conclusions
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Electromagnetic Basics: The Biot-Savart Law
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Major near-Earth Current Systems
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Nature of near-Earth Magnetic Fields Core Motion of conductive outer core fluid 30,000-50,000 nT Changes on order of centuries Ionosphere Dynamo layer between 100-140 km altitude in the E-region 10-50 nT at surface EEJ is from enhanced eastward current at dip equator
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Nature of near-Earth Magnetic Fields Magnetosphere Magnetopause, tail and ring currents 20-30 nT at surface Broad scale, but rapidly changing FACs Connect ionosphere with magnetosphere at high latitudes in the F-region 30-100 nT during quiet times
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Nature of near-Earth Magnetic Fields Lithosphere Rigid portion of crust above Curie temperature Induced and remanent Up to 20 nT at satellite altitude Induced fields Time varying external fields influencing conductive material in Earth skin layer Magnitude depends upon inducing period
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Time Scales of Magnetic Fields from Various Sources
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Terrestrial Magnetic Field Applications Orientation/Reckoning Used by satellites including GPS Navigation systems Geophysical prospecting Aeromagnetic surveys Towed by ships Military targets Deep Earth probing Space weather
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Comprehensive Approach to Modelling Terrestrial Fields Method Parameterize fields from all major near- Earth sources Coestimate these parameters by solving an inverse problem Use satellite vector/scalar and ground- based observatory hourly-means data Advantages Optimal for frequency overlap More feasible than treating fields as noise
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Data Used for Modelling Satellites POGO – 1965-1971, scalar only, elliptic Magsat – 1980, vector, six months duration, only dawn and dusk, 450 km Oersted – 1999-present, vector, 750 km CHAMP – 2001-present, vector, 400 km Observatories Several hundred, continuous, but poorly distributed Vector hourly-mean values
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Recent Satellite Magnetic Mapping Missions Oersted – vector and scalar at ~ 750 km CHAMP – vector and scalar at ~ 400 km
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Permanent Magnetic Observatory Stations
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Maxwell’s Equations Ampere’s Law Absence of magnetic monopoles Faraday’s Law Gauss’ Law
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(Laplace Eqn) (Internal) (External) Potential Fields (zero J)
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Absence of Monopoles Internal: n = 0 term violates Maxwell’s monopole equation at origin O External: n = 0 term is constant, doesn’t contribute
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Spherical Harmonic Functions (Y n m ) n=6, m=0 n=6, m=3 n=6, m=6
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Toroidal Fields (non-zero J in thin shells) Vector potential Toroidal scalar Toroidal only
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Parameterizing Core and Lithospheric Fields Core Broad scale, dominates n = 1-14 Secular variation (SV) represented by cubic B-spline functions Lithosphere All spatial scales, but breaks from core R n at about n = 15 Modelled as n = 15-65 Considered static Vector biases solved for at observatories
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R n Spectrum of Internal Field
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Fluid Velocity at Core- Mantle Boundary
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magnetospheric ring-current ionospheric current systems External Field Current Systems
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Ionospheric Daytime Electron Density
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Parameterizing Ionospheric E-region Field Primary Assume currents flow in sheet at 110 km Use potential functions conforming to quasi-dipole (QD) coordinates defined by DGRF1980 Diurnal and seasonal variation Solar activity via scaling by F10.7 cm flux Induced A priori 1-D conductivity model (4-layer) Infinite conductor at 1000 km depth
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Continuity Across E-region Sheet Current
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E-region Breathes with F10.7 cm Solar Flux
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Quasi-Dipole Chart at Surface from DGRF1980
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Parameterizing Magnetospheric Field Primary Distant currents not differentiated Potential functions in dipole coordinates Diurnal and seasonal variation Ring current activity via linear dependence of external dipole on Dst index Induced Same as for E-region Internal dipole also linear in Dst
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Dst Behavior Around Storm Main Phase on 18 Aug 1998
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Parameterizing Ionospheric F-region Field Magsat (vector only) Modelled separately for dawn and dusk Assume QD meridional currents Use toroidal functions conforming to QD coordinates Seasonal variation Oersted (vector only) Same as above, but single model with diurnal variation
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Ionospheric F-region Currents 1.Field-aligned currents (FACs) connect ionosphere and magnetosphere in polar region 2.Meridional currents associated with the equatorial electrojet (EEJ)
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Ionospheric F-region Currents
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The Principle of Least- Squares Estimation
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Estimation of CM Parameters via Iterative Gauss Method Solves non-linear LS problems Fast convergence Cheaper than Newton method Allows for A priori information Smooth core SV Eliminate nightside E-region current Damp excursions from LT external dipole Smooth F-region current
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CM Fits to Observatory Hourly-Means
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CM Fits to Satellite Data
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CM Core B r at CMB at 2000
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CM Core F at Surface at 1980
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CM Core F at Surface from 1980 to 2000
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CM Lithospheric B r at 400 km
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CM Ionospheric Z at Surface
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CM Magnetospheric Z at Surface on 22 Aug 1998
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CM F-region J r from Magsat at Dawn and Dusk
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CM F-region J from Oersted at Noon
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Conclusions Present CMs are only models accounting for all these field sources CMs are separating fields in a consistent and plausible manner Future More realistic conductivity models Better treatment of magnetospheric fields Increased use of CMs for applications
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