Observations of Precipitating Electrons by Cylindrical Electrostatic Analyzers on Board the Japanese Antarctic Sounding Rockets S-310JA-1 and 2 (e. Event Session) (Proceedings of the Second Symposium on Coordinated Observations of the Ionosphere and the Magnetosphere in the Polar Regions : Part II)

Cylindrical electrostatic analyzers on board the Japanese Antarctic sounding rockets S-310JA-1 and S-310JA-2 launched on February 13, 1976 and on February 10, 1977, respectively, at Syowa Station, measured the energy spectra of energetic electrons in the Antarctic polar ionosphere. At the time of th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Haruya KUBO, Tomizo ITOH
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Japanese
Published: National Institute of Polar Research 1980
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15094/00008155
https://doaj.org/article/9704c596dcc84efd80928de357b48b12
Description
Summary:Cylindrical electrostatic analyzers on board the Japanese Antarctic sounding rockets S-310JA-1 and S-310JA-2 launched on February 13, 1976 and on February 10, 1977, respectively, at Syowa Station, measured the energy spectra of energetic electrons in the Antarctic polar ionosphere. At the time of the former flight, the geomagnetic activity was low, and the electron flux of about 10^3 electrons/cm^2 sec・str・eV was obtained at an energy of 5 keV. The altitude dependence of the flux of 2 keV electrons showed the maximum flux near 150 km altitude of the descending path. This implies that there was a local electron precipitation region. At the time of the latter flight, the geomagnetic activity was high and there was a diffuse aurora at the time of launch. The measured electron flux was about 1.8×10^3 electrons/ cm^2・sec・str・eV at the energy of 4.2 keV and about 2.3×10^4 electrons/cm^2・sec・str・ev at 740 eV. The electron whose energy was in the neighborhood of 500 eV had a considerable pitch angle dependence, and the field aligned current density due to these electrons was estimated to be about 1.47×10^<-7>A/m^2.