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Pervasive small-scale enhancements in mantle and polar rain precipitation

Authors :
Patrick T. Newell
Anthony T. Y. Lui
Igor Veselovsky
Source :
Geophysical Research Letters. 22:3263-3266
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 1995.

Abstract

Short duration bursts—1–3 s or 0.05–0.15° MLAT—of 32 eV to several hundred eV electrons are regularly observed in the polar rain and mantle precipitation regions by the DMSP satellites. The spacing between bursts is typically 9–12 s (70–90 km) and is sometimes regular but more often irregular. Sometimes quasi-periodic trains of 4 or 5 evenly spaced bursts occur. Electron spectra in the bursts are variable, but typically represent an enhancement of an order of magnitude in the spectral differential energy flux, but without showing signs of field-aligned acceleration. Previous reports of bursty polar cap precipitation consisted of precipitation with large scale (hundreds of km) spatial inhomogeneity of plasma sheet origin under northward IMF conditions. The bursts described herein occur for southward as well as northward IMF Bz, and represent fine structure (7.5 km) within regions that are of magnetosheath origin and which are homogenous over larger spatial scales (>∼100 km). We suggest that the observed phenomena may be related to the nonstationary processes in the outer high latitude magnetosphere.

Details

ISSN :
00948276
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geophysical Research Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2071858e86b8e5fbb1cb9a7d2d3e9092
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/95gl03087