Three-dimensional imaging of the plasma parameters of a moving cusp aurora

During a period of negative IMF BZ on 13 January 2013, an all-sky imager at Longyearbyen, Svalbard observed a mesoscale aurora moving towards the east-northeast in the cusp, passing through the field of view of the EISCAT Svalbard Radar (ESR) elevation scan. The elevation scans that were being perfo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taguchi, Satoshi, Hosokawa, Keisuke, Ogawa, Yasunobu
Other Authors: 田口, 聡, タグチ, サトシ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier BV 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2433/214277
Description
Summary:During a period of negative IMF BZ on 13 January 2013, an all-sky imager at Longyearbyen, Svalbard observed a mesoscale aurora moving towards the east-northeast in the cusp, passing through the field of view of the EISCAT Svalbard Radar (ESR) elevation scan. The elevation scans that were being performed at that time have a horizontal coverage of approximately 300 km, at an altitude of 300 km. The plasma data obtained from the elevation scans and the 630-nm aurora emission data from the all-sky imager have shown that ion temperature enhanced 50?60 s earlier than electron density, and that the maximum auroral intensity in the ESR's field of view occurred about 40 s after the electron density enhancement. On the basis of these results we have constructed three-dimensional images of elevated ion temperatures and enhanced electron density associated with the mesoscale moving cusp aurora. The three-dimensional image shows that the enhancement of the ion temperature is prominent in the horizontal area of ~160 km×~80 km below an altitude of ~300 km, and that this volume forms on the forward side of the enhanced electron density region. We interpret these configurations as being a result of a mesoscale twin-cell convection, which is embedded in the background flow such that the symmetrical axis of the twin-cell is inclined from the background flow direction by several tens of degrees. Our method for visualizing three-dimensional features such as these could be an effective approach to understanding the mesoscale dynamics of the cusp, which is usually located in latitudes that are difficult for the currently-operated radars that permit three-dimensional, simultaneous measurements to investigate.