A Neural Network Model Relating H at a Single Station to Dst



A Neural Network Model Relating ΔH at a Single Station to Dst

T. P. O’Brien and R. L. McPherron

Institute for Geophysics and Planetary Physics, 405 Hilgard, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567

ABSTRACT

The operational goal of real-time estimation of the Dst index from single-station ΔH requires a good understanding of how ΔH depends on local time, storm conditions, and season of year. In this investigation artificial neural networks are trained on several years of data for the San Juan magnetometer. One neural network produces ΔH given Dst, local time, day of year; the other additionally requires Solar Wind dynamic pressure and interplanetary electric field. The neural networks illustrate the local time, seasonal, and storm modulation of the nearly linear relationship between Dst and ΔH. We present evidence that a seasonal offset may be present in the Dst index. We also demonstrate that the partial ring current, as measured by the asymmetry index, persists, after the interplanetary electric field has vanished, for larger values of Dst during northern winter, and that this asymmetry is linearly proportional to Dst.

INTRODUCTION

The Dst index is intended to be a direct measure of the symmetric ring current [Chapman and Bartels, 1962; Knecht and Shuman, 1985; Lincoln, 1967; Rostoker, 1972]. It is calculated from several (4 to 6) ground stations by removing the quiet day variation from the H (North) component of the magnetic field at the Earth’s surface current [Iyemori et al., 1992; Sugiura, 1964; Sugiura and Kamei, 1991]. The deviation from the quiet day at a single station is referred to as ΔH. Dst is calculated as a weighted arithmetic average of several ΔH measurements. The asymmetry index, ASY, is intended to measure the magnitude of the partial ring current, and is defined as the range of ΔH values measured around the Earth [Crooker and Siscoe, 1971, Clauer et al. 1983, Kawasaki and Akasofu, 1971]. By its very definition, Dst depends on a particular ΔH in a linear fashion; ASY has no such inherent relation to the magnitude of ΔH or Dst. Figure 1 suggests that in this time interval there is a direct relation between Dst and ASY. We will show that in an average sense ASY does indeed vary directly with Dst.

Since models of the magnetosphere often require Dst as an input, the real-time specification of Dst is an important operational goal. One method for estimating Dst in real time is the use of a single ΔH rather than a global average. This simple estimate can be quiet good. However, the relationship between ΔH and Dst depends strongly on local time and also depends on season, storm phase, and even the magnitude of Dst. Although our primary interest is estimating Dst from ΔH at a single station, we have built models of ΔH rather than Dst, because such models tell us directly about the local current systems that give rise to differences between ΔH and Dst.

We have used hourly data from the OMNI data set in combination with USGS magnetometer data for the years 1979 and 1985-1992. The models we have built are single hidden layer, feed forward, artificial neural networks, trained using a combination of Newton’s method and gradient descent. The final model for each combination of inputs was chosen from a large pool of competing models based on out of sample performance. Models for both Guam and San Juan were built, but the San Juan (SJG) models were significantly better, and have been used exclusively. Two different models were generated for San Juan. Model SJGa describes ΔH as a function of local time (lt), day of year (DOY), and Dst; model SJGb describes ΔH as a function of local time, day of year, Dst, Solar Wind dynamic pressure (Psw), and interplanetary electric field (VBs). The out of sample rms error for SJGa is 11.2 nT, for SJGb 10.5 nT. Throughout this discussion, Dst, ΔH, and ASY will be presented in nT, Psw in nPa, and VBs in mV/m.

After training the networks on real data, we fed them artificial data so that we could isolate interesting behavior. In particular, we tend to vary only one of the inputs (e.g. local time) while holding the others fixed. This allows us to get a clear idea of how one particular parameter effects the system. Although it is physically impossible for Dst to remain constant for a day while the Earth rotates beneath the current systems in the magnetosphere, our empirical model allows us to simulate this situation. Since we can arbitrarily specify the local time we are interested in, we can, in effect, have San Juan at all longitudes simultaneously. We are not making any dynamic simulations, but merely varying parameters that we typically associate with time which are, in fact, spatial. That is, local time is merely a measure of the spatial location of the station relative to the Earth-Sun line, and season is just a measure of the position of the Earth in its orbit, and consequently, the orientation of its rotation axis to the Solar equator.

SEASONAL EFFECTS ON THE MAPPING OF ΔH TO Dst

First, we will investigate the seasonal effects in the ΔH-Dst mapping. We will show that the offset in the best linear fit to the neural network output for Dst below –40 nT varies in a regular way with season. We will also show that the variation in the slope of this relation with season is less pronounced. We choose to make the linear fit to Dst ( -40 nT because the ΔH-Dst relationship is extremely linear in this regime. Although the neural network produces ΔH as a function of Dst, we have inverted the relation and created least-squared-error linear fits of Dst as a function of ΔH. In Figure 2 left, the horizontal contour lines show us that the seasonal dependence of the slope is insignificant, except at 1800 hours, where the change is limited to the range 0.7-0.8. In contrast the local time variation of the slope is much larger ranging between 0.8-1.4 late in the year. Local time and seasonal changes in the offset plotted in the right panel are comparable covering a range –10 to +15 nT. This offset is not large compared to the Dst index during a large storm, but it is large enough to seriously effect estimates of the recovery rate late in a storm.

There are two possible causes of this dependence: incorrect quiet days and genuine seasonal dependence. The first could arise from the standard method used in calculating the quiet days for the Dst index. The ΔH values are the hourly deviations from the quiet day field of the Earth. The Dst index is the weighted average of these ΔH values. We use the standard Dst index, but calculate our own hourly ΔH values. The standard technique and the technique we employ for calculating the quiet day are essentially the same, but we use a longer time window in defining the secular variation of the Earth’s magnetic field, and we use a slightly different technique to remove storm effects. While the differences in technique could give rise to some systematic difference in our ΔH and those used to calculate the standard Dst, there is no reason to suggest that the differences between these two techniques would give rise to a coherent seasonal variation. The second possible cause of the seasonal dependence could be the result of some interplay between the geomagnetic coordinate system and the day-night asymmetry in the ionospheric conductivity, which is tied to the geographic coordinates. This could be confirmed by building a similar ΔH model for a Southern Hemisphere station, but has not been done at this time.

THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE PARTIAL RING CURRENT DURING STORM RECOVERY

The next issue we will address is the disappearance of the partial ring current in the storm recovery phase. It is generally believed that that the partial ring current always vanishes when the interplanetary magnetic field Bz turns northward, or, equivalently, VBs = 0 [see examples in Kawasaki and Akasofu, 1971]. Because we can hold all the other variables constant and only change the local time, we can simulate ASY as the range of ΔH we get out of our model if we apply it to 24 hours of local time while holding all other parameters fixed. In Figure 3, we have done this for several values of VBs, several values of Dst, and 2 days of the year. Surprisingly, we find that during northern winter, the simulated ASY index can be quite large for VBs = 0. For example at Dst = -40 nT, the ASY is about 40 nT at DOY 331 (late November) for VBs = 0. However, for the same conditions on DOY 151 (late May), the simulated ASY index is less than 20 nT. This suggests that somehow, during northern winter, the partial ring current does not decay soon after the IMF Bz turns northward, but that during northern summer the decay is more immediate.

In Figure 3, it is also apparent that the asymmetry determined by the neural network depends strongly on the magnitude of Dst. Figure 4 shows that the ΔH values at different local times spread with stronger Dst. This spread is the asymmetry, and its dependence on Dst is linear for both the main and recovery phases. A linear dependence of the ASY is essential to making a good model of Dst given only one ΔH. Figure 4 also demonstrates that the neural network model is fitting a meaningful difference in the behavior at different local times. This result was so surprising we checked it by plotting the WDC-C2 ASY-H versus SYM-H at one-minute resolution. There is an obvious linear dependence between the two with a correlation coefficient ~ 0.7

The persistence of ASY beyond the time when VBs shuts off can most likely be explained by one of two mechanisms. First, it is possible that the asymmetry persists because of a neutral flywheel effect where the neutrals provide an inertia, which keeps the partial ring current system going after the driver has shut off. Second, it is possible that a local ionospheric current is actually contaminating the ΔH measurements, and that this current is related directly to the storm intensity, and therefore Dst. The latter would be consistent with the observed seasonal variation in the less accurate Guam models.

DISCUSSION

We have built a neural network model of ΔH from Dst, local time, day of year, and Solar Wind conditions. With this model, we have shown that a significant seasonal offset exists in the linear relation between ΔH and Dst, which suggests that Dst itself may have a seasonal offset. We have also shown the partial ring current, as measured by the ASY index, does not shut off immediately when VBs drops to zero, but, at least in parts of the year, persists until Dst itself decays. The first of these results suggests either an error in the calculation of the quiet day or a seasonally dependent storm-time feature of the ionosphere. The second result suggests either a neutral flywheel providing inertia to the partial ring current or, again, a seasonally dependent storm-time feature of the ionosphere. The possibility of a seasonally dependent storm-time feature of the ionosphere could be tested by the investigation of the ΔH-Dst relationship for a Southern Hemisphere ground station.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We would like to thank the USGS and NGDC and WDC-C2 for providing the data that we have used in this analysis. This work is supported by NSF grant ATM 96-13667

REFERENCES

Chapman, S., and J. Bartels, Geomagnetism, Vol 1, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1962.

Clauer, C.R., R.L. McPherron, and C. Searls, Solar wind control of the low-latitude asymmetric magnetic disturbance field, J. Geophys. Res., 88(A4), 2123-2130, 1983.

Crooker, N.U., and G. Siscoe, A tudy of the geomagnetic disturbance field asymmetry, Radio Sci., 6, 495-501, 1971.

Iyemori, T., T. Araki, T. Kamei, and M. Takeda, Mid-latitude geomagnetic indices ASY and SYM (provisional), Data Analysis Center for Geomagnetism and Space Magnetism, Faculty of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan, 1992.

Kawasaki, K., and S.-I. Akasofu, Low-latitude DS component of geomagnetic storm field, J. Geophys. Res., 76(10), 2396-2405, 1971.

Knecht, D.J., and B.M. Shuman, The geomagnetic field, in Handbook of Geophysics and the Space Environment, edited by A.S. Jursa, pp. 4-1 to 4-37, Air Force Geophysics Laboratory, Hanscom Field, MA, 1985.

Lincoln, J.V., Geomagnetic Indices, in Physics of Geomagnetic Phenomena, edited by S.M.a.W.H. Campbell, pp. 67-100, Academic Press, New York, 1967.

Rostoker, G., Geomagnetic indices, Rev. Geophys. Space Phys., 10(4), 935-950, 1972.

Sugiura, M., Hourly values of equatorial Dst for the IGY, Ann. Int. Geophys. Year, 35, 9-45, 1964.

Sugiura, M., and T. Kamei, Equatorial Dst index 1957-1986, ISGI Pubnlications Office, Saint-Maur-des-Fosses, France, 1991.

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Fig. 4. The ΔH-Dst relation is shown for recovery phase (VBs = 0) and main phase (VBs = 3). The dashed and dashed-dotted line represent neural network fits, and the ‘o’ and ‘+’ indicate real data at approximately the same values of Dst, VBs, etc., at dawn and dusk, respectively. The ΔH-Dst relation is linear for Dst below -40 nT. The spread (ASY) grows linearly below this point.

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Fig. 2. For the slope of the linear Dst-ΔH relationship, it is clear that the local time dependence dominates. For the offset, however, the seasonal variation is significant, weighing in at nearly 10 nT peak to peak for some local times.

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Fig. 1. The variations in Dst and ASY are correlated in time and magnitude. The substorm activity in the first disturbed period seems to prevent Dst from recovering. In the second period, the recovery is more rapid.

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Fig. 3. In northern summer (DOY 151), the asymmetry drops below 20 nT when VBs shuts off. In the winter (DOY 331), it persists at more than 40 nT until Dst recovers to –40 nT.

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