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web science | 1993

VARIABILITY OF DAYSIDE CONVECTION AND MOTIONS OF THE CUSP CLEFT AURORA

Mike Lockwood; J. Moen; S. W. H. Cowley; A.D. Farmer; U. P. Løvhaug; H. Lühr; V. N. Davda

We present measurements of the ionospheric plasma flow over the range of invariant latitudes 71–76°, observed at 10-second resolution using both the EISCAT radars, with simultaneous observations of the 630 nm cusp/cleft aurora made by a meridian-scanning photometer at Ny Alesund, Svalbard. A major increase in the trans-auroral voltage from 5 to 40 kV (associated with sunward convection in the early afternoon sector) is found to follow a southward motion of the aurora and coincide with the onset of regular transient auroral breakup events. It is shown that these observations are consistent with recent theoretical work on how ionospheric flows are excited by time-dependent reconnection at the dayside magnetopause.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 1989

Analysis of incoherent scatter radar data from non-thermal F-region plasma

K. Suvanto; Mike Lockwood; K.J. Winser; A.D. Farmer; B.J.I. Bromage

A procedure is presented for fitting incoherent scatter radar data from non-thermal F-region ionospheric plasma, using theoretical spectra previously predicted. It is found that values of the shape distortion factor D∗, associated with deviations of the ion velocity distribution from a Maxwellian distribution, and ion temperatures can be deduced (the results being independent of the path of iteration) if the angle between the line-of-sight and the geomagnetic field is larger than about 15–20°. The procedure can be used with one or both of two sets of assumptions. These concern the validity of the adopted model for the line-of-sight ion velocity distribution in the one case or for the full three-dimensional ion velocity distribution function in the other. The distribution function employed was developed to describe the line-of-sight velocity distribution for large aspect angles, but both experimental data and Monte Carlo simulations indicate that the form of the field-perpendicular distribution can also describe the distribution at more general aspect angles. The assumption of this form for the line-of-sight velocity distribution at a general aspect angle enables rigorous derivation of values of the one-dimensional, line-of-sight ion temperature. With some additional assumptions (principally that the field-parallel distribution is always Maxwellian and there is a simple relationship between the ion temperature anisotropy and the distortion of the field-perpendicular distribution from a Maxwellian), fits to data for large aspect angles enable determination of line-of-sight temperatures at all aspect angles and hence, of the average ion temperature and the ion temperature anisotropy. For small aspect angles, the analysis is restricted to the determination of the line-of-sight ion temperature because the theoretical spectrum is insensitive to non-thermal effects when the plasma is viewed along directions almost parallel to the magnetic field. This limitation is expected to apply to any realistic model of the ion velocity distribution function and its consequences are discussed. Fit strategies which allow for mixed ion composition are also considered. Examples of fits to data from various EISCAT observing programmes are presented.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 1988

Ion-neutral dynamics in the high latitude ionosphere: first results from the INDI experiment

K.J. Winser; A.D. Farmer; D. Rees; Anasuya Aruliah

Abstract The INDI experiment consisted of a series of joint observations between EISCAT and a Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) situated at Kiruna. The FPI measured the 630 nm neutral oxygen emission at eight positions on a 30° elevation circle, giving a spatial average of the neutral wind field with a time resolution of about 15 min. The radar performed a seven-position, near-meridional scan in a region common to the optical measurements. Such simultaneous observations of the ionised and neutral components of the Earths atmosphere allow a study of the ion energy balance and the coupling between species. The first stage of the analysis was to derive the neutral wind from the EISCAT data using the simplified ambipolar diffusion and ion energy equations. This was then compared with the direct measurements from the FPI. There was good agreement between derived and measured meridional winds, but the zonal wind values, although showing the same trends, differed in magnitude by a factor of 3–5. The reasons for this are discussed. The meridional wind data was used to derive the ion-neutral collision frequency. This was a factor of 2 or 3 less than recent model values. Preliminary comparisons of the measured electron densities with the 630 nm emission intensity gave clues to the chemistry of the emission process.


web science | 1990

Auroral and plasma flow transients at magnetic noon

Mike Lockwood; P. E. Sandholt; A.D. Farmer; S. W. H. Cowley; B. Lybekk; V. N. Davda

We present observations of a transient event in the dayside auroral ionosphere at magnetic noon. F-region plasma convection measurements were made by the EISCAT radar, operating in the beamswinging “Polar” experiment mode, and simultaneous observations of the dayside auroral emissions were made by optical meridian-scanning photometers and all-sky TV cameras at Ny Alesund, Spitzbergen. The data were recorded on 9 January 1989, and a sequence of bursts of flow, with associated transient aurora, were observed between 08:45 and 11:00 U.T. In this paper we concentrate on an event around 09:05 U.T. because that is very close to local magnetic noon. The optical data show a transient intensification and widening (in latitude) of the cusp/cleft region, as seen in red line auroral emissions. Over an interval of about 10 min, the band of 630 nm aurora widened from about 1.5° of invariant latitude to over 5° and returned to its original width. Embedded within the widening band of 630 nm emissions were two intense, active 557.7 nm arc fragments with rays which persisted for about 2 min each. The flow data before and after the optical transient show eastward flows, with speeds increasing markedly with latitude across the band of 630 nm aurora. Strong, apparently westward, flows appeared inside the band while it was widening, but these rotated round to eastward, through northward, as the band shrunk to its original width. The observed ion temperatures verify that the flow speeds during the transient were, to a large extent, as derived using the beamswinging technique; but they also show that the flow increase initially occurred in the western azimuth only. This spatial gradient in the flow introduces ambiguity in the direction of these initial flows and they could have been north-eastward rather than westward. However, the westward direction derived by the beamswinging is consistent with the motion of the colocated and coincident active 557.7 nm arc fragment, A more stable transient 557.7 nm aurora was found close to the shear between the inferred westward flows and the persisting eastward flows to the North. Throughout the transient, northward flow was observed across the equatorward boundary of the 630 nm aurora. Interpretation of the data is made difficult by lack of IMF data, problems in distinguishing the cusp and cleft aurora and uncertainty over which field lines are open and which are closed. However, at magnetic noon there is a 50% probability that we were observing the cusp, in which case from its southerly location we infer that the IMF was southward and many features are suggestive of time-varying reconnection at a single X-line on the dayside magnetopause. This IMF orientation is also consistent with the polar rain precipitation observed simultaneously by the DMSP-F9 satellite in the southern polar cap. There is also a 25% chance that we were observing the cleft (or the mantle poleward of the cleft). In this case we infer that the IMF was northward and the transient is well explained by reconnection which is not only transient in time but occurs at various sites located randomly on the dayside magnetopause (i.e. patchy in space). Lastly, there is a 25% chance that we were observing the cusp poleward of the cleft, in which case we infer that IMF Bz was near zero and the transient is explained by a mixture of the previous two interpretations.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 1993

The polar cap absorption event of 19–21 March 1990: recombination coefficients, the twilight transition and the midday recovery

J.K. Hargreaves; A.V Shirochkov; A.D. Farmer

For the polar cap event of 19–21 March 1990, effective recombination coefficients have been estimated at heights between 60 and 80 km by comparing the electron density, measured by the EISCAT VHF incoherent scatter radar, with production rates calculated from proton fluxes measured on the GOES-7 satellite. The estimated coefficients change considerably between day and night, the change being relatively greater at lower altitudes. During the midday recovery, for which there is clear evidence during this event, the edge of the polar cap moved over the radar, and it is thus possible to see the effect of the edge on the spectrum of precipitating protons. The spectrum hardened at this time, indicating an increase in the cut-off rigidity.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 1984

Field-perpendicular and field-aligned plasma flows observed by EISCAT during a prolonged period of northward IMF

A.D. Farmer; Mike Lockwood; R.B Horne; B.J.I. Bromage; K. S. C. Freeman

The effect of a prolonged period of strongly northward Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) on the high-latitude F-region is studied using data from the EISCAT Common Programme Zero mode of operation on 11–12 August 1982. The analysis of the raw autocorrelation functions is kept to the directly derived parameters Ne, Te, Ti and velocity, and limits are defined for the errors introduced by assumptions about ion composition and by changes in the transmitted power and system constant. Simple data-cleaning criteria are employed to eliminate problems due to coherent signals and large background noise levels. The observed variations in plasma densities, temperatures and velocities are interpreted in terms of supporting data from ISEE-3 and local riometers and magnetometers. Both field-aligned and field-perpendicular plasma flows at Tromso showed effects of the northward IMF: convection was slow and irregular and field-aligned flow profiles were characteristic of steady-state polar wind outflow with flux of order 1012 m−2 s−1. This period followed a strongly southward IMF which had triggered a substorm. The substorm gave enhanced convection, with a swing to equatorward flow and large (5 × 1012 m−2 s−1), steady-state field-aligned fluxes, leading to the possibility of O+ escape into the magnetosphere. The apparent influence of the IMF over both field-perpendicular and field-aligned flows is explained in terms of the cross-cap potential difference and the location of the auroral oval.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 1988

Model predictions of the occurrence of non-Maxwellian plasmas, and analysis of their effects on EISCAT data

A.D. Farmer; Mike Lockwood; Timothy Fuller-Rowell; K. Suvanto; U. P. Løvhaug

The recent identification of non-thermal plasmas using EISCAT data has been made possible by their occurrence during large, short-lived flow bursts. For steady, yet rapid, ion convection the only available signature is the shape of the spectrum, which is unreliable because it is open to distortion by noise and sampling uncertainty and can be mimicked by other phenomena. Nevertheless, spectral shape does give an indication of the presence of non-thermal plasma, and the characteristic shape has been observed for long periods (of the order of an hour or more) in some experiments. To evaluate this type of event properly one needs to compare it to what would be expected theoretically. Predictions have been made using the coupled thermosphere-ionosphere model developed at University College London and the University of Sheffield to show where and when non-Maxwellian plasmas would be expected in the auroral zone. Geometrical and other factors then govern whether these are detectable by radar. The results are applicable to any incoherent scatter radar in this area, but the work presented here concentrates on predictions with regard to experiments on the EISCAT facility.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 1984

EISCAT observations of plasma convection and the high-latitude, winter F-region during substorm activity

Mike Lockwood; A.D. Farmer; H. J. Opgenoorth; S.R Crothers

A 24 h period of observations by the EISCAT radar and other ground-based instrumentation is used to study the role of plasma convection in determining the morphology of the high-latitude F-region during winter. It is suggested that, in the afternoon sector of the polar convection pattern, rapid zonal (westward) flows caused low F-region electron densities due to an extension of the mid-latitude trough far into the sunlit hemisphere. Low densities on the dawn side prior to 0600 UT may also have been due to a trough-like feature. Although the generation mechanism is unclear, the trough may be the fossil remnant of a substorm. Around midnight, high F-region densities were seen, probably due to plasma flow emerging from the cap through soft particle precipitation in the auroral oval. Two substorms occurred at times when the radar was south of the auroral oval. Both caused enhanced convection speeds, a swing to equatorward flow, enhanced E-region densities and a depleted F-region. The first was seen as a Westward Travelling Surge, and the swing to purely southward flow which followed the surge front did not return to westward flows until 80–110 min later. The Harang discontinuity was observed co-rotating eastwards between the substorms, 65 ± 30 min before the separatrix between the dawn and dusk convection cells.


Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics | 1990

The winter anomaly at Tromsø

A.D. Farmer; S.R Crothers; V.N Davda

Abstract A database of average electron densities at several heights above Tromso, in northern Norway, has been constructed using EISCAT Common Programme data. These data cover more than half a solar cycle, and are binned by height, time of year and time of day. A comparison of the summer and winter electron density variations of any height band above 250 km shows that the F -region winter anomaly exists at Tromso latitudes at solar maximum, as it does at mid-latitudes, and that, also like mid-latitudes, it is largely absent at solar minimum. However, upon closer examination it is seen that the average daytime electron density maximum is larger a month or so each side of the winter solstice than it is at mid-winter, and there, even at solar minimum, this density maximum is anomalously high compared to the summer. This effect is unlikely to be due simply to the variation of solar illumination. Numerical modelling of the mid- and high-latitude F -region has so far concentrated on explaining the winter anomaly. It is clear, though, that this off-solstice or ‘semi-annual’ effect can be of as great, or greater, importance, and more work is needed to explain it fully.


Advances in Space Research | 1990

Comparing numerical simulations of the high-latitude ionosphere to an empirical mean model based on EISCAT data

A.D. Farmer; Timothy Fuller-Rowell; S. Quegan

Abstract An empirical model of the high-latitude ionosphere at Tromse, Norway, based on EISCAT data from 1981–1983, is compared to the University College London-Sheffield University 3-D, coupled ionosphere-thermosphere computational model. The computational model is found to accurately predict the average level, and some aspects of the shape, of the plasma-density variations but there are differences in the details, especially in the winter.

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K.J. Winser

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Anasuya Aruliah

University College London

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B.J.I. Bromage

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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V. N. Davda

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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D. Rees

University College London

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S.R Crothers

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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