Difference between revisions of "FG: Magnetospheric Sources of Particle Precipitation and Their Role on Electrodynamic Coupling of Magnetosphere-Ionosphere-Thermosphere Systems"

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This year we have overall six sessions, four of them being joint and two as stand-alone sessions. The stand-alone sessions are organized based on topical relevance. The sessions will feature talks on global precipitation and wave-driven precipitation and their effects. <br>
 
This year we have overall six sessions, four of them being joint and two as stand-alone sessions. The stand-alone sessions are organized based on topical relevance. The sessions will feature talks on global precipitation and wave-driven precipitation and their effects. <br>
  
=== 1. CPMP-MPEC joint session, Tuesday, 13 June, 10:30-12:00 PT, Room Pacific A ===
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=== 1. COMP-MPEC joint session, Tuesday, 13 June, 10:30-12:00 PT, Room Pacific A ===
  
 
This joint session will focus on magnetospheric sources of particle precipitation at different planets.
 
This joint session will focus on magnetospheric sources of particle precipitation at different planets.

Revision as of 13:31, 10 June 2023

The particles precipitating from the magnetosphere play an important role in the determination and modelling of ionospheric electrodynamics, especially conductance which modulates the magnetosphere’s response to the solar wind. Precipitation of magnetospheric particles and their energy deposition in the Earth’s upper atmosphere depend on a number of parameters including, but not limited to, their magnetospheric origin, energy range, flux, auroral display, spatiotemporal scale, etc. As a result, the ionospheric conductance can be modified in various ways further affecting the plasma convection, field-aligned (FAC) and ionospheric currents, and ionospheric/thermospheric temperature and densities. Therefore, understanding the properties of different sources of magnetospheric precipitation and their relative roles in the electrodynamic coupling of M-I across a broad range of spatiotemporal scales is crucial for improving predictive modelling capabilities. This broad topic necessitates the existence of a designated GEM focus group to achieve a community-wide collaboration.

🪑 Focus Group Chairs

🗓 Focus Group Goals
To advance the physical knowledge and improve the numerical modelling of
- The magnetospheric particle precipitation (precipitation mechanism and characteristics, magnetospheric origin, auroral forms).
- The effects of particle precipitation on the ionospheric electrodynamics, with an emphasis on the ionospheric conductance.
- Response of the I-T system to precipitation and its feedback to the Magnetosphere.

🤝 Get Involved in MPEC FG
Please sign-up to our MPEC e-mail list to learn more about our FG activities and opportunities to participate at a greater capacity: https://forms.gle/BrsYo6LCewiysUij6.

GEM Workshops

2023 GEM Workshop Agenda

This year we have overall six sessions, four of them being joint and two as stand-alone sessions. The stand-alone sessions are organized based on topical relevance. The sessions will feature talks on global precipitation and wave-driven precipitation and their effects.

1. COMP-MPEC joint session, Tuesday, 13 June, 10:30-12:00 PT, Room Pacific A

This joint session will focus on magnetospheric sources of particle precipitation at different planets.

1. George Clark, "Opening Remarks"
2. Bob Lysak, "MI-coupling w/ emphasis on comparative processes between Earth & Jupiter"
3. Shaosui Xu, "Magnetic topology of Mars vs Venus"
4. Jim Raines, "Cusp precipitation at Mercury"
5. Weijie Sun, "Flux transfer events in planetary magnetospheres"
6. Ryan Dewey, "Characteristics of Mercury's energetic electron environment"
7. Chuanfei Dong, "Electrodynamic coupling of magnetosphere-ionosphere-thermosphere systems at Mars"
8. Dibyendu Sur, "Presence of Double Layers and Phase-Space Holes at Venus"
10. Walk-in, "Presentations/Poster Advertisements"

2. MPEC stand-alone session, Tuesday, 13 June, 13:30-15:00 PT, Room Pacific B

This stand-alone session will start with one invited talk followed by contributed talks and walk-in talks of 1-slide summaries. The session focuses on global magnetospheric precipitation.

1. Doga Ozturk - Dong Lin, "Introductory Remarks"
2. Tom Sotirelis, "Scene-setting Talk" (invited)
3. Angeline Burell, "Dual boundary coordinates in polar magnetosphere-ionosphere studies"
4. Gowtam Valluri, "ML-based Particle Precipitation Model"
5. Louis Ozeke, "RADICALS mission update"
6. Sneha Yadav, "Association of equatorward extended streamers with overshielding conditions at equatorial latitude"
7. Jeremiah Johnson, "Aurora Detection and Classification in THEMIS All-Sky Images via Self-Supervised Semi-Supervised Learning"
8. Jun Liang, "Green isolated proton auroras: Observations and proton-hydrogen-electron transport model simulation"
9. Poster Presenters, 1-slide walk-in poster advertisements

3. MPEC stand-alone session, Tuesday, 13 June, 15:30-17:00 PT, Room Pacific B

This stand-alone session will consist of contributed talks on magnetospheric precipitation due to waves and their effects on ionospheric conductances. The session will end with a discussion of plans for mini-GEM 2023 and GEM 2024.

1. Bill Lotko, "Poleward Propagating Alfvénic surges stimulated by FTEs"
2. Sheng Tian, "Conjunction observations on discrete auroras and Alfven waves: can auroral movies serve as an effective proxy for monitoring wave development in space?"
3. Dillon Gillespie, "Global Mapping of Diffuse Electron Aurora and Ionospheric Conductance from Electron Cyclotron Harmonic Waves"
4. Yiqun Yu, "Ionospheric modulation due to EMIC wave-driven proton precipitation"
5. Xiaojia Zhang, "Ionospheric plasma Density Gradients Associated With Night-Side Energetic Electron Precipitation"
6. Luisa Cappannolo, "Evaluating the atmospheric input and ionization from EMIC-driven electron precipitation"
7. Michael Hartinger, "ULF Wave modulation of Space Weather Significant TEC Events"
8. Steve Kaeppler, "Characteristics of Precipitation - TBD"
9. Doga Ozturk - Dong Lin, "Open Discussion Plans for Next Year and Mini-GEM"

4. IHMIC-GIC-MPEC joint session, Thursday, 15 June, 10:30-12:00 PT, Room Pacific A

This joint session consists of one invited talk followed by contributed talks and walk-in talks on poster summary. We will have follow-up discussions on available data base (GMD, geoelectric field, and GIC) and potential modeling challenge events.

1. Dogacan Ozturk: FG Introduction
2. Mark Engebretson: Solar cycle dependence of extreme GMDs occurrences
3. Michael Hartinger: ULF Wave Contributions to GIC
4. James Weygand: Mapping DFBs observed by THEMIS to GMDs observed on the ground
5. Juan Rodriguez-Zuluaga: Unraveling the coherence breakdown of ground-level geomagnetic disturbances
6. Shin Ohtani: The cause of the 1600 nT Colaba magnetic depression during the 1859 Carrington storm
7. Karl Laundal: How the ionosphere perturbs Earth’s magnetic field
8. Xin Cao: The Response of Ionospheric Currents to External Drivers Investigated Using a Neural Network-Based Model
9. Walk-in talks: 1-slide poster summary
10. Open discussion.

5. MPEC-MESO-DIP joint session, Thursday, 15 June, 13:30-15:00 PT, Room Pacific A

This joint session will focus on meso-scale precipitation due to dipolarization events.

6. MPEC-SCIMM-ML joint session, Thursday, 15 June, 15:30-17:00 PT, Room Pacific A

This joint session will focus on precipitation from the inner magnetosphere using ML models.

2022 mini-GEM Workshop Agenda

The MPEC session will take place on Sunday, December 11th between 15.30-17.00 CT in Williford B Room of the Hilton Chicago Hotel (720 South Michigan Avenue). There will also be a hybrid component accessible via Zoom. (https://alaska.zoom.us/j/87956087298?pwd=ZnY2cUExeVFHV0djcmxKOTBUTm9HQT09)

The tentative meeting schedule is as follows.
1. Jim Raines, "Space weathering on airless bodies: Ion precipitation at Mercury"
2. Louis Ozeke, "The Relationship between Intense Electron Precipitation and Electron Injections"
3. Alexa Halford and Kyle Murphy, "NASA Space Precipitation Impacts Group"
4. Tian Sheng, "Auroral Beads in Conjunction With Kinetic Alfvén Waves in the Equatorial Inner-Magnetosphere"
5. Margaret Chen, "Diffuse Auroral Precipitation Effects on Ionospheric Conductance, Particle, and Joule Heating During the 17 March 2015 Storm"
6. Lonxing Ma, "Simulating the Global Distribution of particle precipitation in response to ULF waves"

2022 GEM Workshop Agenda

There will be 2 stand-alone and 2 joint MPEC sessions. Please follow our slack channel for notifications and discussions: https://gemworkshop.slack.com/archives/C03GNRQAYCF

MPEC Stand-alone session on Monday, June 20, 2022, 13:30-15:00 HDT, at Bluefin

This session will focus on observational studies of magnetospheric sources of particle precipitation.

1. Allison Jaynes, "Rocket Missions and the Energetic Content of Pulsating Aurora"
2. Riley Troyer, "Substorm Activity as a Driver of Energetic Pulsating Aurora"
3. Mykhaylo Shumko, "The Association of Relativistic Electron Microbursts With the Aurora"
4. Jone Peter Reistad, "Origins of keV Electron Precipitation in the Summer Hemisphere Polar Cap: On the Structure and Dynamics of High Latitude Dayside Aurora"
5. Christine Gabrielse, "Estimating Precipitating Energy Flux, Average Energy, and Hall Auroral Conductance in 2D From THEMIS All-Sky-Imagers With Focus on Mesoscales"
6. Jiang Liu, "Embedded R1 and R2 Currents: a Source of Intense Precipitation, and Their Preferred Condition"
7. Harneet Sangha, "An Analysis of Region 2 Field-Aligned Current Bifurcations"

MPEC Stand-alone session on Tuesday, June 21, 2022, 10:30-12:00 HDT, at Alohilani II

This session will focus on numerical studies of magnetospheric sources of particle precipitation.

1. Bill Lotko, TBD (Modelling of Magnetospheric Particle Precipitation)
2. Eftyhia Zesta, "Role of Ion Precipitation in M-I Coupling and Electron Upflow"
3. Yu Lin, "Cusp Ion Precipitation Associated with Magnetopause Reconnection Viewed from Global Hybrid Simulation"
4. Yann Pfau-Kempf, "Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling in Vlasiator"
5. Maxime Grandin, "First 3D Results with Vlasiator on Auroral Proton Precipitation During Southward Interplanetary Magnetic Field Driving"
6. Shanshan Bao, "Gray-box Modeling of Particle Scattering and Auroral Precipitation"
7. Zihan Wang, "COMPASS: A New COnductance Model Based on PFISR And SWARM Satellite Observations"

MPEC-SCIMM joint session on Wednesday, June 22, 2022, 13:30-15:00 HDT, at Alohilani II

1. Raluca Ilie, "Ionospheric Feedback to the Magnetosphere"
2. Michael Hartinger, "ULF Wave Modulation of Total Electron Content"
3. Mei-Ching Fok, TBD (Particle precipitation with the CIMI model)
4. Yongliang Zhang, "Ring Current Aurora"
5. Qianli Ma, "Electron Precipitation and Ionospheric Density Enhancements due to Hiss"
6. Dillon Gillespie, "Global Statistics of Diffuse Electron Aurora and Ionospheric Conductance Directly Derived from Whistler-mode Chorus Waves"
7. Dong Lin, "Origin of the Dawnside SAPS During Major Geomagnetic Storms"

MPEC-IEMIT joint session on Thursday, June 23, 2022, 13:30-15:00 HDT, at Alohilani II

1. Emma Spanswick, "Proposed Upgrades to UCalgary & UAlberta Ground Arrays in Advance of GDC"
2. Hyomin Kim, "Riometer Observations of Particle Precipitation During the LAMP Mission"
3. Jeremiah Johnson, "Understanding Auroral Morphology Through Self-Supervised Machine Learning"
4. Margaret Chen, "Effects of Diffuse Auroral Precipitation on Ionospheric Conductivity and Joule Heating During Storms: Simulation and Data Comparisons"
5. Agnit Mukhopadhyay, "Global Driving of Auroral Precipitation"
6. Eftyhia Zesta, "Impact of the Precipitation Energy Distribution on the I-T system"