Energy and flux variations across thin auroral arcs
-
Published:2011-10-04
Issue:10
Volume:29
Page:1699-1712
-
ISSN:1432-0576
-
Container-title:Annales Geophysicae
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Ann. Geophys.
Author:
Dahlgren H.,Gustavsson B.,Lanchester B. S.,Ivchenko N.,Brändström U.,Whiter D. K.,Sergienko T.,Sandahl I.,Marklund G.
Abstract
Abstract. Two discrete auroral arc filaments, with widths of less than 1 km, have been analysed using multi-station, multi-monochromatic optical observations from small and medium field-of-view imagers and the EISCAT radar. The energy and flux of the precipitating electrons, volume emission rates and local electric fields in the ionosphere have been determined at high temporal (up to 30 Hz) and spatial (down to tens of metres) resolution. A new time-dependent inversion model is used to derive energy spectra from EISCAT electron density profiles. The energy and flux are also derived independently from optical emissions combined with ion-chemistry modelling, and a good agreement is found. A robust method to obtain detailed 2-D maps of the average energy and number flux of small scale aurora is presented. The arcs are stretched in the north-south direction, and the lowest energies are found on the western, leading edges of the arcs. The large ionospheric electric fields (250 mV m−1) found from tristatic radar measurements are evidence of strong currents associated with the region close to the optical arcs. The different data sets indicate that the arcs appear on the boundaries between regions with different average energy of diffuse precipitation, caused by pitch-angle scattering. The two thin arcs on these boundaries are found to be related to an increase in number flux (and thus increased energy flux) without an increase in energy.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geology,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Reference38 articles.
1. Aso, T., Ejiri, M., Urashima, A., Miyaoka, H., Steen, Å., Br{ä}ndstr{ö}m, U., and Gustavsson, B.: First results of auroral tomography from ALIS-Japan multi-station observations in March, 1995, Earth, Planets, and Space, 50, 81–86, 1998. 2. Baker, D. J. and Romick, G. J.: The rayleigh: interpretation of the unit in terms of column emission rate or apparent radiance expressed in SI units, Appl. Optics, 15, 1966–1968, 1976. 3. Borovsky, J. E., Suszcynsky, D. M., Buchwald, M. I., and DeHaven, H. V.: Measuring the thicknesses of auroral curtains, Arctic, 44, 231–238, 1991. 4. Br{ä}ndstr{ö}m, U.: The Auroral Large Imaging System - design, operation and scientific results, IRF Scientific Report 279, ISBN: 91-7305-405-4, PhD thesis, 2003. 5. Burnham, K. P. and Anderson, D.: Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: A Practical Information-Theoretic Approach, Springer-Verlag, 2 edn., 2002.
Cited by
28 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|