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  • GEOPHYSICS  (13)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The neutral E-region wind field was measured at Calgary, Canada (51 N, 114 N) during 75 nights in 1982. Observations of the Doppler shift of the 5577-A emission line of atomic oxygen using a Fabry-Perot interferometer were converted to horizontal wind vectors. From the analysis of the data, four categories of wind characteristics were identified. In order of increasing magnetic activity these categories are: (1) wind field mostly variable in space and time; (2) predominantly equatorward flow throughout the night, (3) predominantly poleward flow throughout the night and (4) north-westward flow before midnight and southward after midnight. The wind magnitude was also variable and on some disturbed days exceeded 200 m/s.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Planetary and Space Science (ISSN 0032-0633); 33; 373-379
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: Photometric observations of the airglow limb at 557.7 nm have been made from the ISIS 2 satellite since 1971. From an analysis of 32,000 airglow limb observations obtained during the first two years of operation, the major temporal and spatial characteristics of the night airglow have been identified. Maxima occur in mid-October and mid-April at all latitudes. There is a marked variation with latitude during the equinox periods, with peak intensities near 35 degrees in autumn and near 25 degrees in spring. It is possible to gain considerable insight into the behavior of the lower thermosphere by combining the airglow observations with a simple model of the photochemical and dynamical processes. In this way a pattern of the latitude and temporal variation of atomic oxygen concentration at the peak of the layer as well as the eddy diffusion in this altitude region have been inferred. The concentration of atomic oxygen shows midlatitude peaks near equinox, and minima about one month after solstice. Average values at midlatitudes are about 1.3 times those at the equator. The amplitude of the semiannual component is about 20% of the mean value at 35 degrees as compared to 10% at the equator, and the amplitude of 12-month component is about 12% at 35 deg and 5% at the equator. The semiannual component has a minimum that occurs approximately 3 weeks (plus or minus) after solstice at all latitudes, while the 12-month component peaks in the summer hemisphere at solstice (plus or minus 2 months).
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: International Council of Scientific Unions Handbook for MAP, Vol. 18; 1 p
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Convergent or divergent thermospheric wind patterns detected by ground-based Fabry-Perot interferometric measurements of the Doppler shifts of atomic lines are demonstrated to occur in the presence of strong intensity gradients and a scattering atmosphere. Consideration is given to the color shifts observed when sighting to the north or the south, and a numerical model is developed to describe the wind patterns which produce the recorded shifts. An account is taken of the direct and scattered components of the brightness, with the atmosphere treated as a single scattering layer with a reflecting surface underneath. A scattering coefficient is calculated, together with the line shape of the wavelength shifts. The scattered light is demonstrated, both through simulations and measurements taken near Calgary, Alberta, to produce convergence or divergence of the color shifts, depending on the line-of-sight of the viewing.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Planetary and Space Science (ISSN 0032-0633); 31; March 19
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The article discusses the automated optical observatory at Calgary, Alberta, Canada at which three sophisticated optical instruments are operated unattended via telecommunications between the laboratory and observatory computers. These instruments are a single-etalon, 15-cm Fabry-Perot interferometer with six filter channels, a tilting filter with four filter channels, and a 1-m Ebert-Fastie spectrophotometer. The instrumental control computer is a LSI-11 microcomputer packaged with dual floppy disk drives. The observatory has been operating with good results since September 1981.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Optical Engineering; 22; Jan
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: The Atmosphere Explorer photochemistry is used to interpret simultaneous observations made at the Arecibo Observatory of the OI (6300 A) and NI (5200 A) airglow surface brightness and electron density and temperature profiles measured by incoherent scatter radar. It was found that the theory and the experiment agree for the 5200-A emission; however, it was not possible to obtain to a complete agreement for the 6300-A nightglow. It is suggested that the source of the discrepancy results from one of the parameters used to calculate the production rate of O(lD); the data show evidence of an asymmetrical behavior of the ionosphere between times when the F layer is descending and when it is ascending, with asymmetry probably reflecting the effects of transport on molecular ion densities in the bottom side of the F region.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research; 85; June 1
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The poleward arc system of a double oval distribution is shown to activate at the end of the optical expansion phase signifying the beginning of substorm recovery. The velocity dispersed ion signature (VDIS) can exist coincident with this discrete aurora developing on the most poleward oval. Although the VDIS is usually associated with ion beams in the plasma sheet boundary layer, it is demonstrated that the ionospheric signature is not beamlike but distributed in pitch angle. At the time when the double oval begins to form, the magnetic field in the magnetotail lobe becomes less flared and can show Pc 5 period oscillations. Similar pulsations also exist in the ionosphere associated with the most poleward oval and with stationary surge formation. Theoretical considerations link this phenomenon with a wave source tailward of x(sub GSE) = -30R(sub E) and fast mode evanescent waves propagating earthward in the tail lobe region. In this case the magnetotail appears to act like a waveguide and the plasma sheet boundary layer as a resonance region. This implies that the coupling of this fast mode waves is with the plasma sheet boundary layer and not with dipolar like field lines. The implications of this for the reconnection model of substorms are discussed.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 100; A7; p. 12,093-12,102
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: During the later stages of the auroral substorm the luminosity distribution frequently resembles a double oval, one oval lying poleward of the normal or main UV auroral oval. We interpret the double oval morphology as being due to the plasma sheet boundary layer becoming active in the later stages of the substorm process. If the disturbance engulfs the nightside low-latitude boundary layers, then the double oval configuration extends into the dayside ionospheric region. The main UV oval is associated with the inner portion of the central plasma sheet and can rapidly change its auroral character from being diffuse to discrete. This transition is associated with the substorm process and is fundamental to understanding the near-Earth character of substorm onset. On the other hand, the poleward arc system in the nightside ionosphere occurs adjacent to or near the open-closed field line boundary. This system activates at the end of the optical expansion phase and is a part of the recovery phase configuration in substorms where it occurs. These two source regions for nightside discrete auroral arcs are important in resolving the controversy concerning the mapping of arcs to the magnetosphere. The dayside extension of this double oval configuration is also investigated and shows particle signatures which differ considerably from those on the nightside giving clues to the magnetospheric source regions of the aurora in the two local time sectors. Near-Earth substorm onsets are shown to be coupled to processes occurring much further tailward and indicate the importance of understanding the temporal development of features within the double oval. Using 'variance images,' a new technqiue for the investigation of these dynamics is outlined.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 100; A7; p. 12,075-12,092
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: There are many possible observing strategies available for mapping the thermospheric wind field by using observations of the Doppler shift of the O (1D) airglow with a Fabry-Perot interferometer. The determination of the neutral wind field from observed line-of-sight velocities invariably involves some assumptions about the nature of the wind field. A standard method of observing employs the assumption that horizontal gradients in the wind field are linear. An analysis of measurements from Arecibo, Puerto Rico, that makes use of this assumption, is discussed. For work at high latitudes this assumption may be unrealistic. An alternative approach that requires that local time and longitude be interchangeable but eschews the assumption of linear gradients has been developed and used at Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Calgary, Alberta. These different techniques are examined, and the discussion is illustrated with some typical results.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Planetary and Space Science (ISSN 0032-0633); 32; 493-501
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-06-27
    Description: Measurements of night-time 6300 A airglow intensities at the Arecibo Observatory have been compared with dissociative recombination calculations based on electron densities derived from simultaneous incoherent backscatter measurements. The agreement indicates that the nightglow can be fully accounted for by dissociative recombination. The comparisons are examined to determine the importance of quenching, heavy ions, ionization above the F-layer peak, and the temperature parameter of the model atmosphere. Comparable fits between the observed and calculated intensities are found for several available model atmospheres. The least-squares fitting process, used to make the comparisons, produces comparable fits over a wide range of combinations of neutral densities and of reaction constants. Yet, the fitting places constraints upon the possible combinations; these constraints indicate that the latest laboratory chemical constants and densities extrapolated to a base altitude are mutually consistent.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Planetary and Space Science; 22; May 1974
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  • 10
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