Characteristics of magnetospheric radio noise spectra
Abstract
Magnetospheric radio noise spectra (30 kHz to 10 MHz) taken by IMP-6 and RAE-2 exhibit time-varying characteristics which are related to spacecraft position and magnetospheric processes. In the mid-frequency range (100-1,000 kHz) intense noise peaks rise by a factor of 100 or more above background; 80% of the peak frequencies are within the band 125 kHz to 600 kHz, and the peak occurs most often (18% of the time) at 280 kHz. This intense mid-frequency noise has been detected at radial distances from 1.3 Re to 60 Re on all sides of the Earth during magnetically quiet as well as disturbed periods. Maximum occurrence of the mid-frequency noise is in the evening to midnight hours where splash-type energetic particle precipitation takes place. ""Magnetospheric lightning'' can be invoked to explain the spectral shape of the observed spectra.
- Publication:
-
Final Report
- Pub Date:
- April 1976
- Bibcode:
- 1976rsc..reptQ....H
- Keywords:
-
- Earth Magnetosphere;
- Electromagnetic Noise;
- Noise Spectra;
- Auroras;
- Electrostatic Waves;
- Explorer 43 Satellite;
- Extremum Values;
- High Energy Interactions;
- Communications and Radar