The application of artificial electron beams to magnetospheric research.
Abstract
Scientific and technical progress made in the utilization of electron beams injected from large sounding rockets for the investigation of magnetospheric structure and dynamics and plasma physics is reviewed. Consideration is given to the problem of vehicle neutralization during the generation of electron beams in the ionosphere and the stability and electromagnetic wave emissions of electron beams propagating in space. Optical effects observed during the two Hess artificial aurora experiments, the Minnesota Echo IV and V experiments, the Zarnitsa-1 artificial aurora experiment and the Precede-Excede experiments are discussed, together with atmospheric scattering effects observed during Echo I, II and III, and results of the three experimental programs which have detected and analyzed beams after passage through the distant magnetosphere (the second Hess experiment, ARAKS and the Electron Echo experiments) are presented. Finally, plans for future research are outlined, and a chronology and complete bibliography of the programs conducted to date are included.
- Publication:
-
Reviews of Geophysics and Space Physics
- Pub Date:
- August 1980
- DOI:
- 10.1029/RG018i003p00659
- Bibcode:
- 1980RvGSP..18..659W
- Keywords:
-
- Earth Magnetosphere;
- Echo Sounding;
- Electron Beams;
- Rocket Sounding;
- Satellite Sounding;
- Atmospheric Optics;
- Electron Scattering;
- High Energy Electrons;
- Magnetospheric Instability;
- Plasma Generators;
- Plasma-Particle Interactions;
- Geophysics;
- Earth Magnetosphere