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Very low frequency waves stimulated by an electron accelerator in the auroral ionosphereThe sounding rocket, Polar 5, carrying a 10 keV electron accelerator in a mother-daughter configuration and other diagnostic instruments, was launched into a slightly disturbed ionosphere with weak auroral activity on February 1, 1976 from Northern Norway to study VLF wave phenomena. The rocket trajectory crossed two auroral regions: one, between 86 and 111 s flight time, and a secondary region between 230 and 330 s. The daughter, carrying the accelerator, was separated axially from the mother in a forward direction at an altitude of 90 km. The VLF experiment, carried by the mother payload, recorded both electromagnetic and electrostatic waves. The receiving antenna was an electric dipole, 0.3 m tip-to-tip, oriented 90 degrees to the rocket spin axis. The onboard particle detector recorded increased electron fluxes in the two auroral regions. A double peaked structure was observed in the fluxes of 4-5 and 12-27 keV electrons within the northern auroral form. The number density of thermal plasma varied during the flight, with maximum density within the main auroral region. To the north of this aurora a slow, steady decrease in the density was observed, with no enhancement in the region of the second aurora.
Document ID
19810051634
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Holtet, J. A.
(Oslo Univ. Norway)
Pran, B. K.
(Oslo Univ. Norway)
Egeland, A.
(Oslo Universitetet Oslo, Norway)
Grandal, B.
(Oslo Univ. Norway)
Jacobsen, T. A.
(Oslo Univ. Norway)
Maehlum, B. N.
(Oslo Univ. Norway)
Troim, J.
(Forsvarets Forskningsinstitutt Kjeller, Norway)
Date Acquired
August 11, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1981
Subject Category
Geophysics
Accession Number
81A36038
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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