학술논문

Uncertainty in solar wind forcing explains polar cap potential saturation
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Physics - Space Physics
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
Language
Abstract
Extreme space weather events occur during intervals of strong solar wind electric fields. Curiously during these intervals, their impact on measures of the Earth's response, like the polar cap index, is not as high as expected. Theorists have put forward a host of explanations for this saturation effect, but there is no consensus. Here we show that the saturation is merely a perception created by uncertainty in the solar wind measurements, especially in the measurement times. Correcting for the uncertainty reveals that extreme space weather events elicit a ~300% larger impact than previously thought. Furthermore, they point to a surprisingly general result relevant to any correlation study: uncertainty in the measurement time can cause a system's linear response to be perceived as non-linear.
Comment: 22 pages, with "Materials and Methods" starting from page 10, after the Main Text. Supplementary figures starting from page 18. The manuscript is being submitted for peer review