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The equatorial aurora in the extreme ultravioletThe extreme ultraviolet telescope on the Apollo-Soyuz mission observed the equatorial aurora from an altitude of 220 km on four separate occasions in July 1975, in quiet geomagnetic conditions (Ap = 6). In all cases signals well above ambient background in the 50-150, 114-150, 170-600, and 500-780 A bands were recorded as the spacecraft moved across the equator and the instrument viewed the atmosphere below it. The observed emissions are confined to a band roughly 10 to 20 deg in width with the peak emission occurring in the range -15 to +2 deg magnetic latitude. No enhancement on the 1350-1550 A channel was noted. The observed signals are interpreted as recombination radiation of energetic helium and, possibly, oxygen ions originating in the terrestrial ring current.
Document ID
19800068081
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Paresce, F.
(California Univ. Berkeley, CA, United States)
Chakrabarti, S.
(California, University Berkeley, Calif., United States)
Date Acquired
August 10, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1980
Subject Category
Geophysics
Meeting Information
Meeting: Low latitude aeronomical processes
Location: Bangalore
Country: India
Start Date: May 29, 1979
End Date: June 9, 1979
Accession Number
80A52251
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS9-13799
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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