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ULF wave electric fields at synchronous orbit during substormsCharacteristics of the wave electric fields in the frequency range 3 to 22 mHz in the equatorial plane (on GEOS 2) during four substorms were investigated. During intervals of about ten min duration after the substorm onset, large electric fields appear at synchronous orbit. In particular, 3 to 4 spectral peaks in the wave electric field data can be discerned. The dominant models occur at approximately 6 and approximately 10 mHz. Additional peaks exist around 15 and 20 mHz. Although the sense of polarization of these modes varies, these modes tend to have right handed polarization with a typical ellipticity of 0.2. The major axis usually points to the east, lying at an angle of 0 to 50 deg with the azimuthal direction. Mapped into the ionosphere, this corresponds to a north-west orientation. New wave activity appears some 30 to 40 min after the onset lasting about 10 min. The wave properties of these events are relatively close to those events occurring near the substorm onset, except for the orientation angle of the major axis which is now 140 to 180 deg. Because the magnetometer data is not available, the generation mechanism of the waves studied is hard to identify. There is some evidence that these waves are a superposition of compressional waves, produced by the collapse of the magnetotail, and the field line resonances, triggered by these compressional waves.
Document ID
19950011880
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Laakso, Harri
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Janhunen, Pekka
(Finnish Meteorological Inst. Helsinki, Finland)
Date Acquired
August 16, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1992
Publication Information
Publication: ESA, Substorms 1
Subject Category
Geophysics
Accession Number
95N18295
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
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