Geomagnetic field fluctuations during the passage at the Earth’s orbit of the tail of the 15–16 July 2000 ejecta

2002 
In this work we present the analysis of the geo- magnetic field fluctuations observed at different ground sta- tions (approximately along two latitudinal arrays, separated by several hours in local time) during the passage at the Earth's orbit of the tail of the 15-16 July 2000 coronal ejecta. The time interval of interest is characterized by northward in- terplanetary magnetic field conditions and several changes in the solar wind dynamic pressure. We found at all stations, both in the local morning and in the local evening, simul- taneous and highly coherent waves at the same discrete fre- quencies ( 1.8 and 3.6 mHz) and suggest a possible inter- pretation in terms of global compressional modes driven by an impulsive variation of the solar wind pressure. Along the array situated in the morning sector, at the highest latitudes, the higher frequency mode seems to couple with the local field line resonance; on the other hand, along the array situ- ated in the evening sector, the characteristics of the observed fluctuations suggest that the highest latitude station could be located at the footprint of open field lines. Our results also show that solar wind pressure variations observed during the recovery phase of the storm do not find correspondence in the geomagnetic field variations, regardless of local time and latitude; conversely, some hours later continuous solar wind pressure variations find a close correspondence in the geo- magnetic field variations at all stations.
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