Instruction manual for multichannel auroral photometer

Great Whale River, Quebec, (55°17•N, 77°47 1 W; recently renamed Poste-de­la-Baleine) and Byrd Station, Antarctica, (80°00.4 1 S, l19°29o5 1 W) are geomagnetically conjugate locations: that is, they lie at opposite ends of the same line of force of the earth's magnetic field. For this reason, a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Watson, M.D.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: National Research Council of Canada. Radio and Electrical Engineering Division 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4224/21274676
https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/ft/?id=6fdbbbf9-3406-422d-a8b1-47c8fb0cec93
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Description
Summary:Great Whale River, Quebec, (55°17•N, 77°47 1 W; recently renamed Poste-de­la-Baleine) and Byrd Station, Antarctica, (80°00.4 1 S, l19°29o5 1 W) are geomagnetically conjugate locations: that is, they lie at opposite ends of the same line of force of the earth's magnetic field. For this reason, a number of scientific agencies from Canada and the United States are making simultaneous measurements at the two stations of various geomagnetic and related phenomena. The visible aurora is among the better-known of these phenomena. NRC publication: Yes