Principal components of quiet time temporal variability of equatorial and low-latitude geomagnetic fields

Bhattacharyya, Archana ; Okpala, Kingsley C. (2015) Principal components of quiet time temporal variability of equatorial and low-latitude geomagnetic fields Journal of Geophysical Research - A: Space Physics, 120 (10). pp. 8799-8809. ISSN 0196-6928

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Official URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2015JA0...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2015JA021673

Abstract

Diurnal variations of the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field ΔH on International Quiet days of 1999–2012, measured hourly at two stations in the same longitude zone in the Northern Hemisphere, near and away from the dip equator, have been subjected to principal component analysis. This technique is also applied to the difference ΔHEEJ of ΔH at these two stations, which is attributed to the equatorial electrojet (EEJ). The first three principal components, PC1–PC3, account for 91–96% of the variances in the data. Maximum contribution to the quiet day variations in ΔH around its peak in the morning hours at both the stations, and in the EEJ, comes from the day-to-day variation of the amplitude of PC1. Patterns of day-to-day variations of PC1 amplitudes for the equatorial station and the EEJ are essentially semiannual modulated by solar EUV flux, superimposed on a longer timescale solar EUV flux-dependent trend. Contributions from PC2 and to a lesser extent from PC3 are seen to be responsible for the absence of semiannual variations in ΔH in the afternoon hours at the equatorial station. Distribution of amplitudes of PC2 and PC3 for ΔHEEJ for weak electrojet days shows seasonal features in accordance with greater occurrence of afternoon (morning) counter electrojet during June (December) solstice. During the extended solar minimum, PC3 amplitudes for ΔH at the equatorial station and for the EEJ display annual variation. Possible sources for these seasonal features in the variations of equatorial ΔH are discussed.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to the American Geophysical Union.
ID Code:112402
Deposited On:15 Dec 2017 11:00
Last Modified:15 Dec 2017 11:00

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