Publication Date:
2019-06-27
Description:
Rocket observations of far-ultraviolet terrestrial airglow emissions in the 1230- to 1450-A band at night have been carried out from White Sands Missile Range. Three rockets carried 15.4-cm-diam far-ultraviolet telescopes to about 220 km altitude at various times during the night from postsunset to predawn. Postsunset and predawn observations were made when the solar zenith angle at the conjugate ionosphere was about 95 deg, and in both cases positive identification of strong O I 1304-A emissions was made. Evidence that in these cases the 1356/1304 intensity ratio was less than 0.2 is presented. Observations made well into the night yielded only an upper limit to the combined O I 1304- and 1356-A emissions of 20 Rayleighs, consistent with previous observations and theoretical calculations. These results show that meaningful rocket observations of the cosmic far ultraviolet background can be made only when the solar zenith angle at the conjugate ionosphere of the launch site is larger than 105 deg or if atomic oxygen emission lines are excluded from the detectors' bandpass.
Keywords:
SPACE SCIENCES
Type:
Astrophysics and Space Science; 30; Sept
Format:
text
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