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On the latitudinal variations of the ionospheric electric field during magnetospheric disturbances
142
Citations
25
References
1983
Year
EngineeringIonospheric Electric FieldPlasma PhysicsMagnetospheric DisturbancesSolar-terrestrial InteractionSpace Plasma PhysicGeophysicsGeospace PhysicsAtmospheric SciencePlasma TheoryJoint Alert CampaignMid‐latitude RadarsLatitudinal VariationsGeometric LatitudeSpace WeatherMagnetospheric PlasmaRadarIonosphereMagnetospheric Physics
A joint alert campaign was organized during the month of October 1980 by the incoherent scatter radars in the American sector: namely, Jicamarca, Arecibo, Millstone Hill, and Chatanika. The campaign, which met with success, was designed to study the behavior of the ionospheric electric field as a function of latitude during magnetically active conditions. The Arecibo data in this campaign support present and previous observations at Jicamarca that suggest that when the convection E field suddenly decreases, the Alfvén layer shielding field becomes unbalanced and penetrates the plasmasphere. While this type of observation is reasonably convincing, others are more difficult to categorize. We suggest that, beside the high‐latitude electric fields, time‐varying auroral conductivity models will have to be considered in order to understand the morphology of the low‐latitude E field disturbances. We present the first correlation analysis and determination of the amplitude ratio of the disturbed zonal electric field at 30° geometric latitude (Arecibo) to the field at 0° (Jicamarca). Other highlights of the paper are a discussion of DP2, which may help clarify the controversy surrounding it, and a discussion of the sensitivity of low‐ and mid‐latitude radars to disturbances of magnetospheric origin. We show that this sensitivity maximizes at the magnetic equator.
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