Simultaneous TRACERS and THEMIS Observations of Reversed Cusp Ion Dispersions and Dual-Lobe Reconnection

Abstract

We present observations from two consecutive TRACERS-2 orbits through the northern low-altitude cusp. During the first crossing, TRACERS-2 observed reversed cusp ion dispersion and sunward convection, consistent with magnetopause reconnection tailward of the cusp during this northward IMF interval. Simultaneous THEMIS-D observations at the equatorial magnetopause show heated magnetosheath plasma captured on closed field lines, with similar particle spectra as in in the low-altitude cusp, indicating that reconnection indeed occurred tailward of the cusp and in both hemispheres. When TRACERS-2 traversed the northern cusp again, 95 minutes later, the IMF was dominated by a negative BX component. Despite the different IMF conditions, TRACERS-2 recorded nearly the same cusp signatures as before, i.e., reversed ion dispersion and sunward convection. The observations indicate that tailward-of-cusp reconnection can occur for both northward and BX-dominated IMF and that these distinct IMF geometries can produce remarkably similar plasma and field signatures in the low-altitude cusp.

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