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New Science in Plain Sight : Citizen Scientists Lead to Discovery of Optical Structure in the Upper Atmosphere

Authors :
MacDonald, Elizabeth
Donovan, E.
Nishimura, Y.
Case, Nathan Anthony
Gillies, D. M.
Gallardo-Lacourt, B.
Archer, W. E.
Spanswick, E.
Bourassa, N.
Connors, M.
Heavner, Matt
Jackel, B.
Kosar, Burcu
Knudsen, D. J.
Ratzlaff, C.
Schofield, I.
MacDonald, Elizabeth
Donovan, E.
Nishimura, Y.
Case, Nathan Anthony
Gillies, D. M.
Gallardo-Lacourt, B.
Archer, W. E.
Spanswick, E.
Bourassa, N.
Connors, M.
Heavner, Matt
Jackel, B.
Kosar, Burcu
Knudsen, D. J.
Ratzlaff, C.
Schofield, I.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

A glowing ribbon of purple light running east-west in the night sky has recently been observed by citizen scientists. This narrow, subauroral, visible structure, distinct from the traditional auroral oval, was largely undocumented in the scientific literature and little was known about its formation. Amateur photo sequences showed colors distinctly different from common types of aurora and occasionally indicated magnetic field–aligned substructures. Observations from the Swarm satellite as it crossed the arc have revealed an unusual level of electron temperature enhancement and density depletion, along with a strong westward ion flow, indicating that a pronounced subauroral ion drift (SAID) is associated with this structure. These early results suggest the arc is an optical manifestation of SAID, presenting new opportunities for investigation of the dynamic SAID signatures from the ground. On the basis of the measured ion properties and original citizen science name, we propose to identify this arc as a Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancement (STEVE).

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, application/pdf, https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/89755/1/aaq0030_ArticleContent_v4.pdf, English, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1425705246
Document Type :
Electronic Resource