Dynamics Explorer measurements of particles, fields, and plasma drifts over a horse-collar auroral pattern
Abstract
As shown from ground-based measurements and satellite-borne imagers, one type of global auroral pattern characteristic of quiet (usually northward IMF) intervals is that of a contracted but thickened emission region in which the dawn and dusk portions can spread poleward to very high latitudes, (the type of a pattern referred to as a 'horse-collar' aurora by Hones et al., 1989). In this report we use a DE data set to examine a case in which this horse-collar pattern was observed by the DE-1 auroral imager while at the same time the DE-2, at lower altitude, measured precipitating particles, electric and magnetic fields, and plasma drifts. There is close agreement between the optical signatures and the particle precipitation patterns. The particle, plasma, and field measurements made along the satellite track and the 2-D perspective of the imager provide a means of determining the configuration of convective flows in the high-latitude ionosphere during this interval of northward IMF. Recent mapping studies are used to relate the low-altitude observations to possible magnetospheric source regions.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Geomagnetism and Geoelectricity
- Pub Date:
- 1992
- Bibcode:
- 1992JGG....44Q1225S
- Keywords:
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- Auroral Zones;
- Dynamics Explorer Satellites;
- Interplanetary Magnetic Fields;
- Particle Precipitation;
- Plasma Drift;
- Satellite Imagery;
- Convective Flow;
- Magnetic Poles;
- Polar Caps;
- Statistical Analysis