- Shi, Xueling;
- Lin, Dong;
- Wang, Wenbin;
- Baker, Joseph BH;
- Weygand, James M;
- Hartinger, Michael D;
- Merkin, Viacheslav G;
- Ruohoniemi, J Michael;
- Pham, Kevin;
- Wu, Haonan;
- Angelopoulos, Vassilis;
- McWilliams, Kathryn A;
- Nishitani, Nozomu;
- Shepherd, Simon G
An interplanetary shock can abruptly compress the magnetosphere, excite magnetospheric waves and field-aligned currents, and cause a ground magnetic response known as a sudden commencement (SC). However, the transient (<∼1 min) response of the ionosphere-thermosphere system during an SC has been little studied due to limited temporal resolution in previous investigations. Here, we report observations of a global reversal of ionospheric vertical plasma motion during an SC on 24 October 2011 using ∼6 s resolution Super Dual Auroral Radar Network ground scatter data. The dayside ionosphere suddenly moved downward during the magnetospheric compression due to the SC, lasting for only ∼1 min before moving upward. By contrast, the post-midnight ionosphere briefly moved upward then moved downward during the SC. Simulations with a coupled geospace model suggest that the reversed E⃗×B⃗ vertical drift is caused by a global reversal of ionospheric zonal electric field induced by magnetospheric compression during the SC.