More comments: this paper is turning out to be pretty much the nitty-gritty anatomy of a Birkeland current. It shows that in the "flux tubes", the B-field in the center of the tube is parallel to the tube, while the B-field in the wall of the tube is perpendicular, which is what we would expect for electrons spiraling around the longitudinal axis -- the strongest field is generated in the center by the rotation of the electrons around the axis, while they also have a secondary spin that generates a perpendicular field that is only apparent in the tube wall (since superposition overpowers it in the center). And all of the parameters that they measured varied with respect to the position within the tube (center vs. wall), including particle velocity, ion entropy density, proton/electron ratio, electron temperature, and field-aligned electron flux. The fact that the flux tubes begin with the same radius as granules allows me to trace them all of the way from the surface of the Sun, through the helmet streamers, into the heliospheric current sheet, and then into the aurora.upriver wrote:The actual paper.
The flux tube texture of the solar wind.
http://www.readcube.com/articles/10.1029/2007JA012684
The next step will be to figure out what the heck happens to the current after the aurora. It's the same current flowing into both the north and the south poles, so it isn't a feed-thru current. And you can't just pump current into a capacitor indefinitely -- sooner or later, it shorts out. So if there is a current flowing into the Earth's environment, if not the Earth itself, it has to come back out somewhere, right?
One theory is that the current flows into the Earth on the day side, and then across the surface at the poles as the Pederson current, and then back out into space on the night side.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/e ... ystems.png
But then I'd expect for the aurora to be concentrated into shafts on the day & night sides, not distributed in a ring going all of the way around. Also, the image above is showing two currents on each side (day/night): one flowing into the Earth, and the other flowing out. Yet the aurora only has one concentric ring of discharge. So I really don't understand that model, and I'm wondering if it was just a hastily rationalized answer for the same questions that I'm asking now, and which really doesn't match up with the fine-grain detail.
Has anybody studied the aurora, and if so, what am I'm missing here?