Longitudinal differences in electron precipitation near L = 4

The origin of the significant differences revealed in data on electron precipitation characteristics obtained above Siple Station, Antarctica, and Kerguelen Islands was investigated. The two stations are both in the Southern Hemisphere at nearly the same magnetic latitude (L=4) and at longitudes tha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bering, E. A., III, Benbrook, J. R., Leverenz, H., Roeder, J. L., Stansbery, E. G.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1988
Subjects:
46
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19890024142
Description
Summary:The origin of the significant differences revealed in data on electron precipitation characteristics obtained above Siple Station, Antarctica, and Kerguelen Islands was investigated. The two stations are both in the Southern Hemisphere at nearly the same magnetic latitude (L=4) and at longitudes that place them roughly at equal distances east and west of the center of the South Atlantic magnetic anomaly. The primary data used in the study were counting rates from rocket-borne parachute-deployed scintillation counters and VLF data from ground-based and rocket-borne receivers. The two locations were found to differ in two major respects: (1) the precipitation background at Kerguelen Islands is very low, with high levels of wave activity being required to produce any detectable precipitation, and (2) X-ray microbursts, very common at Siple, were found to be essentially absent at Kerguelen. This observation supports models of the microburst generation process which predict maximum pitch angle scatterings of only a few tenths of a degree.