Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe Scintillation

Abstract In this work, it is demonstrated that substorm‐driven penetration electric fields can efficiently enhance the upward plasma transport, favoring the development and structuring of plasma irregularities and the occurrence of scintillation on L‐band signals. While most previous studies focus o...

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Main Authors: J. Sousasantos, F. S. Rodrigues, B. G. Fejer, R. W. Eastes, A. O. Moraes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-03-01
Series:Space Weather
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2024SW004297
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author J. Sousasantos
F. S. Rodrigues
B. G. Fejer
R. W. Eastes
A. O. Moraes
author_facet J. Sousasantos
F. S. Rodrigues
B. G. Fejer
R. W. Eastes
A. O. Moraes
author_sort J. Sousasantos
collection DOAJ
description Abstract In this work, it is demonstrated that substorm‐driven penetration electric fields can efficiently enhance the upward plasma transport, favoring the development and structuring of plasma irregularities and the occurrence of scintillation on L‐band signals. While most previous studies focus on investigating penetration electric fields during intense geomagnetic storms, here, the period used (April 01–05, 2020) was under very mild geomagnetic activity (−27 nT ≤ SYM‐H ≤ 6 nT), so that interplanetary and disturbance dynamo contributions are minimized. This period comprised the same seasonal and solar flux conditions, while undergoing multiple short‐lived substorms, making it well‐suited to evaluate unequivocally: (a) to what extent substorm‐driven penetration electric fields alter electrodynamical processes over low latitudes, and (b) how effective they are in contributing to the structuring of the early nighttime ionosphere and the subsequent occurrence of severe scintillation on L‐band signals. Ground‐based and space‐based multi‐instrument data sets were used. The results show that, even under weak geomagnetic activity, substorm‐driven penetration electric fields—despite being subtle and short‐lived—play a decisive role, enhancing the upward drifts, favoring the development of equatorial plasma bubbles and severe scintillation. The findings indicate that substorms with onsets coinciding with early nighttime are more impactful. This decisive contribution is more likely to be identified during late spring and early fall in the northern hemisphere (or vice versa in the southern hemisphere), when the prereversal vertical drifts are moderate—neither too small nor too large—and may have direct impacts on the day‐to‐day variability of equatorial plasma bubbles.
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spelling doaj-art-0edbcb68d341458db7f17eb47ed574db2025-08-20T03:44:00ZengWileySpace Weather1542-73902025-03-01233n/an/a10.1029/2024SW004297Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe ScintillationJ. Sousasantos0F. S. Rodrigues1B. G. Fejer2R. W. Eastes3A. O. Moraes4William B. Hanson Center for Space Sciences The University of Texas at Dallas Dallas TX USAWilliam B. Hanson Center for Space Sciences The University of Texas at Dallas Dallas TX USACenter for Atmospheric and Space Sciences Utah State University Logan UT USALaboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics University of Colorado Boulder CO USAInstituto de Aeronáutica e Espaço São José dos Campos BrazilAbstract In this work, it is demonstrated that substorm‐driven penetration electric fields can efficiently enhance the upward plasma transport, favoring the development and structuring of plasma irregularities and the occurrence of scintillation on L‐band signals. While most previous studies focus on investigating penetration electric fields during intense geomagnetic storms, here, the period used (April 01–05, 2020) was under very mild geomagnetic activity (−27 nT ≤ SYM‐H ≤ 6 nT), so that interplanetary and disturbance dynamo contributions are minimized. This period comprised the same seasonal and solar flux conditions, while undergoing multiple short‐lived substorms, making it well‐suited to evaluate unequivocally: (a) to what extent substorm‐driven penetration electric fields alter electrodynamical processes over low latitudes, and (b) how effective they are in contributing to the structuring of the early nighttime ionosphere and the subsequent occurrence of severe scintillation on L‐band signals. Ground‐based and space‐based multi‐instrument data sets were used. The results show that, even under weak geomagnetic activity, substorm‐driven penetration electric fields—despite being subtle and short‐lived—play a decisive role, enhancing the upward drifts, favoring the development of equatorial plasma bubbles and severe scintillation. The findings indicate that substorms with onsets coinciding with early nighttime are more impactful. This decisive contribution is more likely to be identified during late spring and early fall in the northern hemisphere (or vice versa in the southern hemisphere), when the prereversal vertical drifts are moderate—neither too small nor too large—and may have direct impacts on the day‐to‐day variability of equatorial plasma bubbles.https://doi.org/10.1029/2024SW004297
spellingShingle J. Sousasantos
F. S. Rodrigues
B. G. Fejer
R. W. Eastes
A. O. Moraes
Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe Scintillation
Space Weather
title Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe Scintillation
title_full Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe Scintillation
title_fullStr Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe Scintillation
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe Scintillation
title_short Evidence of Substorm‐Driven Penetration Electric Field Contributions to Low‐Latitude Phenomena: Enhanced Upward Drifts, Plasma Bubble Development and Severe Scintillation
title_sort evidence of substorm driven penetration electric field contributions to low latitude phenomena enhanced upward drifts plasma bubble development and severe scintillation
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2024SW004297
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