Defining and resolving current systems in geospace
N. Y. Ganushkina, M. W. Liemohn, S. Dubyagin, I. A. Daglis, I., Dandouras, D. L. De Zeeuw, Y. Ebihara, R. Ilie, R. Katus, M. Kubyshkina, S., E. Milan, S. Ohtani, N. Ostgaard, J. P. Reistad, P. Tenfjord, F. Toffoletto,, S. Zaharia, and O. Amariutei

TL;DR
This paper reviews and compares various definitions and identification methods of current systems in near-Earth geospace, highlighting how definitional choices impact understanding of magnetospheric dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive collection of current system definitions and analyzes how different methods influence interpretation of geospace physical processes.
Findings
Multiple current systems exist in near-Earth magnetosphere.
Definitional choices significantly affect physical process interpretation.
Various observational and computational techniques are used for identification.
Abstract
Electric currents flowing through near-Earth space ( 12 ) can support a highly distorted magnetic field topology, changing particle drift paths and therefore having a nonlinear feedback on the currents themselves. A number of current systems exist in the magnetosphere, most commonly defined as (1) the dayside magnetopause Chapman-Ferraro currents, (2) the Birkeland field-aligned currents with high latitude "region 1" and lower-latitude "region 2" currents connected to the partial ring current, (3) the magnetotail currents, and (4) the symmetric ring current. In the near-Earth nightside region, however, several of these current systems flow in close proximity to each other. Moreover, the existence of other temporal current systems, such as the substorm current wedge or "banana" current, has been reported. It is very difficult to identify a local…
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