Ionospheric signatures of cusp latitude Pc 3 pulsations
Journal Article
·
· Journal of Geophysical Research; (United States)
- Augsburg Coll., Minneapolis, MN (United States)
- Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis (United States)
- Univ. of New Hampshire, Durham (United States)
- Univ. of Maryland, College Park (United States)
- Stanford Univ., Palo Alto, CA (United States)
- Aerospace Corp., Los Angeles, CA (United States)
- Boston Coll., Chestnut Hill, MA (United States)
The authors have compared search coil magnetometer, riometer, photometer, and ELF-VLF receiver data obtained at South Pole Station and McMurdo, Antarctica, during selected days in March and April 1986. Narrow-band magnetic pulsations in the Pc 3 period range are observed simultaneously at both stations in the dayside sector during times of low interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) cone angle, but are considerably stronger at South Pole, which is located at a latitude near the nominal foot point of the daysie cusp/cleft region. Pulsations in auroral light a 427.8 nm wavelength are often observed with magnetic pulsations at South Pole, but such optical pulsations are not observed at McMurdo. When Pc 3 pulsations are present, they exhibit nearly identical frequencies, proportional to the magnitude of the IMF, in magnetometer, photometer, and ELF-VLF receiver signals at South Pole Station and in magnetometer signals at McMurdo. Singals from the 30-MHz riometer at South Pole are modulated in concert with the magnetic and optical variations during periods of broadband pulsation activity, but no riometer variations are noted during periods of narrow-band activity. Because riometers are sensitive to electrons of auroral energies (several keV and above), while the 427.8-nm photometer is sensitive to precipitation with much lower energies, they interpret these observatons as showing that precipitating magnetosheathlike electrons (with energies {le} 1 keV) at nominal dayside cleft latitudes are at times modulated with frequencies similar to those of upstream waves. They suggest that these particles may play an important role, via modification of ionospheric currents and conductivities, in the transmission of upstream wave signals into the magnetosphere and in the generation of dayside high-latitude Pc 3 pulsations.
- OSTI ID:
- 5222053
- Journal Information:
- Journal of Geophysical Research; (United States), Journal Name: Journal of Geophysical Research; (United States) Vol. 95:A3; ISSN 0148-0227; ISSN JGREA
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Frequency variations of quasi-periodic ELF-VLF emissions: A possible new ground-based diagnostic of the outer high-latitude magnetosphere
Source regions of long-period pulsation events in electron precipitation and magnetic fields at South Pole Station
The role of the ionosphere in coupling upstream ULF wave power into the dayside magnetosphere
Journal Article
·
Sun Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 1995
· Journal of Geophysical Research
·
OSTI ID:254432
Source regions of long-period pulsation events in electron precipitation and magnetic fields at South Pole Station
Journal Article
·
Mon Feb 28 23:00:00 EST 1994
· Journal of Geophysical Research
·
OSTI ID:29005
The role of the ionosphere in coupling upstream ULF wave power into the dayside magnetosphere
Journal Article
·
Thu Jan 31 23:00:00 EST 1991
· Journal of Geophysical Research; (United States)
·
OSTI ID:5257735
Related Subjects
640201* -- Atmospheric Physics-- Auroral
Ionospheric
& Magetospheric Phenomena
71 CLASSICAL AND QUANTUM MECHANICS
GENERAL PHYSICS
AURORAE
CHARGED-PARTICLE PRECIPITATION
COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS
CURRENTS
EARTH ATMOSPHERE
ELECTRIC CONDUCTIVITY
ELECTRIC CURRENTS
ELECTRICAL PROPERTIES
ELECTRON PRECIPITATION
EVALUATION
HYDROMAGNETIC WAVES
INTERPLANETARY MAGNETIC FIELDS
IONOSPHERE
MAGNETIC FIELDS
MAGNETOSHEATH
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
PLANETARY IONOSPHERES
POLAR CUSP
VARIATIONS
Ionospheric
& Magetospheric Phenomena
71 CLASSICAL AND QUANTUM MECHANICS
GENERAL PHYSICS
AURORAE
CHARGED-PARTICLE PRECIPITATION
COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS
CURRENTS
EARTH ATMOSPHERE
ELECTRIC CONDUCTIVITY
ELECTRIC CURRENTS
ELECTRICAL PROPERTIES
ELECTRON PRECIPITATION
EVALUATION
HYDROMAGNETIC WAVES
INTERPLANETARY MAGNETIC FIELDS
IONOSPHERE
MAGNETIC FIELDS
MAGNETOSHEATH
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
PLANETARY IONOSPHERES
POLAR CUSP
VARIATIONS