Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS

Powerpoint presented on Feb. 13 2007 at Cape Canaveral Since the installation of a UCLA ‘small’ magnetometer in 1998, Athabasca University has made great strides in installing infrastructure in Canada for space science, culminating with the recent expansion of Athabasca University Geophysical Observ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Connors, Martin, Hayashi, Kanji, Russell, Christopher T., Shiokawa, Kazuo, Irwin, Rob, Rostoker, Gordon
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2149/581
id ftathabasuniv:oai:auspace.athabascau.ca:2149/581
record_format openpolar
spelling ftathabasuniv:oai:auspace.athabascau.ca:2149/581 2023-11-05T03:43:04+01:00 Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS Connors, Martin Hayashi, Kanji Russell, Christopher T. Shiokawa, Kazuo Irwin, Rob Rostoker, Gordon 2007-02-20T18:35:13Z 6805504 bytes application/vnd.ms-powerpoint http://hdl.handle.net/2149/581 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/2149/581 aurora satellite Presentation 2007 ftathabasuniv 2023-10-08T07:34:59Z Powerpoint presented on Feb. 13 2007 at Cape Canaveral Since the installation of a UCLA ‘small’ magnetometer in 1998, Athabasca University has made great strides in installing infrastructure in Canada for space science, culminating with the recent expansion of Athabasca University Geophysical Observatory (AUGO). Much of this activity results in an infrastructure very useful in the context of THEMIS, with a plethora of instruments at Athabasca (54.72 N, 246.7 E, CGM (2005) 62.0, 306.5, L=4.55) and magnetic instruments at several locations. Installations in 2007 will provide yet more magnetometers, and unique interpretation methods are available. AUGO houses the fluxgate ‘small’ magnetometer sampling at 1 Hz, although this is near the Meanook standard observatory and may be moved. In addition there is an induction coil sampled at 64 Hz. Optical equipment includes a THEMIS camera, KEO and OMTI multispectral allsky imagers (including Hβ), a “Rainbow” color camera, and an Hβ line-profiling spectrometer. A GPS scintillation receiver is operated by Susan Skone of UofC. NLC collaborates with AU to run a ‘small’ magnetometer at Slave Lake and an older instrument at Paddle Prairie near the GOES West footpoint. The AUTUMN project has magnetometers near Edmonton, Red Deer, Calgary, and Lethbridge, forming an Alberta chain when used with other magnetometers further north. The final AUTUMN magnetometer was installed at Inuvik in 2006. Older (EDA) instruments under test in Saskatoon (UofS/SuperDARN) are available for deployment in 2007, likely in Alberta. The University of Tokyo STEP magnetometers have been kept running and two placed online in real time. These systems, at Ft. Nelson and Ft. St. John in B.C., and in LaRonge, Saskatoon, and Lucky Lake, Saskatchewan, bracket the Alberta chain. These sites include 10 Hz induction coils. Several other STEP instruments are still also working. In eastern Canada, a magnetometer is online at Val d’Or, north of the standard observatory in Ottawa. One is installed but inoperative at ... Conference Object Inuvik Slave Lake Athabasca University: AUSpace
institution Open Polar
collection Athabasca University: AUSpace
op_collection_id ftathabasuniv
language English
topic aurora
satellite
spellingShingle aurora
satellite
Connors, Martin
Hayashi, Kanji
Russell, Christopher T.
Shiokawa, Kazuo
Irwin, Rob
Rostoker, Gordon
Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS
topic_facet aurora
satellite
description Powerpoint presented on Feb. 13 2007 at Cape Canaveral Since the installation of a UCLA ‘small’ magnetometer in 1998, Athabasca University has made great strides in installing infrastructure in Canada for space science, culminating with the recent expansion of Athabasca University Geophysical Observatory (AUGO). Much of this activity results in an infrastructure very useful in the context of THEMIS, with a plethora of instruments at Athabasca (54.72 N, 246.7 E, CGM (2005) 62.0, 306.5, L=4.55) and magnetic instruments at several locations. Installations in 2007 will provide yet more magnetometers, and unique interpretation methods are available. AUGO houses the fluxgate ‘small’ magnetometer sampling at 1 Hz, although this is near the Meanook standard observatory and may be moved. In addition there is an induction coil sampled at 64 Hz. Optical equipment includes a THEMIS camera, KEO and OMTI multispectral allsky imagers (including Hβ), a “Rainbow” color camera, and an Hβ line-profiling spectrometer. A GPS scintillation receiver is operated by Susan Skone of UofC. NLC collaborates with AU to run a ‘small’ magnetometer at Slave Lake and an older instrument at Paddle Prairie near the GOES West footpoint. The AUTUMN project has magnetometers near Edmonton, Red Deer, Calgary, and Lethbridge, forming an Alberta chain when used with other magnetometers further north. The final AUTUMN magnetometer was installed at Inuvik in 2006. Older (EDA) instruments under test in Saskatoon (UofS/SuperDARN) are available for deployment in 2007, likely in Alberta. The University of Tokyo STEP magnetometers have been kept running and two placed online in real time. These systems, at Ft. Nelson and Ft. St. John in B.C., and in LaRonge, Saskatoon, and Lucky Lake, Saskatchewan, bracket the Alberta chain. These sites include 10 Hz induction coils. Several other STEP instruments are still also working. In eastern Canada, a magnetometer is online at Val d’Or, north of the standard observatory in Ottawa. One is installed but inoperative at ...
format Conference Object
author Connors, Martin
Hayashi, Kanji
Russell, Christopher T.
Shiokawa, Kazuo
Irwin, Rob
Rostoker, Gordon
author_facet Connors, Martin
Hayashi, Kanji
Russell, Christopher T.
Shiokawa, Kazuo
Irwin, Rob
Rostoker, Gordon
author_sort Connors, Martin
title Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS
title_short Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS
title_full Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS
title_fullStr Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS
title_full_unstemmed Athabasca University Initiatives Supporting THEMIS
title_sort athabasca university initiatives supporting themis
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/2149/581
genre Inuvik
Slave Lake
genre_facet Inuvik
Slave Lake
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2149/581
_version_ 1781700855577182208