A transient auroral event on the dayside

A strong perturbation lasting about 10 min, beginning at 0930 UT on December 5, 1986, was recorded by high-latitude magnetometer stations in Greenland, Iqaluit, and the South Pole. Viking and Polar Bear satellite observations of the perturbation and observations of similar perturbations on the after...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Heikkila, Walter J., Jorgensen, T. Stockflet T., Lanzerotti, Louis J., Maclennan, Carol G.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1989
Subjects:
46
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19900029446
Description
Summary:A strong perturbation lasting about 10 min, beginning at 0930 UT on December 5, 1986, was recorded by high-latitude magnetometer stations in Greenland, Iqaluit, and the South Pole. Viking and Polar Bear satellite observations of the perturbation and observations of similar perturbations on the afternoon side in Svalbard, Heiss Island, and northern Siberia are also reported. It is suggested that the likely source of the perturbation is a magnetic disturbance in the solar wind observed by ISEE 1/2 and IMP 8. The perturbation is interpreted as an impulsive penetration of solar wind plasma on an interplanetary magnetic flux tube occurring through the magnetopause, ending in the low latitude boundary layer.