Thin current sheet behind the dipolarization front
Nakamura, R., Baumjohann, W., Nakamura, T. K. M., Panov, E., V.,, Schmid, D., Varsani, A., S. Apatenkov, V. A. Sergeev, J. Birn, T. Nagai, C., Gabrielse, M. Andre, J. L. Burch, C. Carr, I. S Dandouras, C. P. Escoubet, A,, N. Fazakerley, B. L. Giles, O. Le Contel, C. T. Russell

TL;DR
This study presents detailed multi-spacecraft observations of a dipolarization front and associated current sheet dynamics in the Earth's magnetotail, revealing complex small-scale structures and processes linked to substorm onset.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the 3D evolution of flow and current sheet disturbances during substorm initiation using multi-point MMS and Cluster data.
Findings
Current sheet thickened during dipolarization front passage
Intense field-aligned currents comprised of small-scale layers
Flow bouncing and reconnection activation linked to current sheet thinning
Abstract
We report a unique conjugate observation of fast flows and associated current sheet disturbances in the near-Earth magnetotail by MMS (Magnetospheric Multiscale) and Cluster preceding a positive bay onset of a small substorm at ~14:10 UT, Sep. 8, 2018. MMS and Cluster were located both at X ~-14 RE. A dipolarization front (DF) of a localized fast flow was detected by Cluster and MMS, separated in the dawn-dusk direction by ~4 RE, almost simultaneously. Adiabatic electron acceleration signatures revealed from comparison of the energy spectra confirm that both spacecraft encounter the same DF. We analyzed the change in the current sheet structure based on multi-scale multi-point data analysis. The current sheet thickened during the passage of DF, yet, temporally thinned subsequently associated with another flow enhancement centered more on the dawnward side of the initial flow. MMS and…
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