Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7|

The Earth’s aurorae radiate away up to 1% of their energy in the form of radio waves, called Auroral Kilometric Radiation (AKR). The mechanism responsible for the emission, the electron cyclotron maser (ECM), produces similar emissions at other planets, in the solar atmosphere, and in astrophysical...

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Main Authors: Labelle, J., Anderson, R. R.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: oeaw 2011
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:http://epub.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=7125-6inhalt/PRE-VII_39-Labelle_285-286.pdf
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.s54gco 2023-05-15T13:57:26+02:00 Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7| Labelle, J. Anderson, R. R. 2011-12-28 http://epub.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=7125-6inhalt/PRE-VII_39-Labelle_285-286.pdf en eng oeaw GOid: 0xc1aa5576_0x002a1d1a 10670/1.s54gco http://epub.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=7125-6inhalt/PRE-VII_39-Labelle_285-286.pdf Elektronisches Publikationsportal der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschafte geo envir Other https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_1843/ 2011 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:01:38Z The Earth’s aurorae radiate away up to 1% of their energy in the form of radio waves, called Auroral Kilometric Radiation (AKR). The mechanism responsible for the emission, the electron cyclotron maser (ECM), produces similar emissions at other planets, in the solar atmosphere, and in astrophysical systems. AKR was not unambiguously identified until the 1970’s because its detection requires a suitably instrumented satellite. The ECM theory predicts radiation beamed outward that cannot penetrate the increasing magnetic field and electron density near the Earth. Nevertheless, there have been observations over the years of AKR-like radio signals detected by ground-based, rocket-borne, and low-earth orbiting satellite-borne instruments, raising the question of whether a mechanism exists by which AKR can penetrate to low altitudes. Here we show the first unambiguous evidence that AKR indeed penetrates to low altitudes on occasions. We identified three examples of AKR-like emissions detected with a ground-based radio receiver at South Pole Station, Antarctica, during a 9-day interval in July, 2004, when the Geotail satellite, monitoring AKR, had a field of view including the auroral field lines above the station. The AKR-like emissions detected at ground-level have the same frequenc–time structure as simultaneous AKR emissions detected on Geotail 115,000-190,000 km away from the Earth. Slight differences in the frequency extent of the emissions at the two locations can be explained by, for example, plasmaspheric screening of the emissions detected by Geotail. These observations represent the first coincident detections of AKR in space and on the ground. They require the existence of an as-yet unidentified mechanism to produce the ground-level emissions which are not predicted by ECM theory, they suggest that previous AKR-like emissions observed at low altitudes may indeed be AKR, and they require revision of the widely-held view that AKR is only detectable from space. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctica South pole South pole Unknown South Pole
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic geo
envir
spellingShingle geo
envir
Labelle, J.
Anderson, R. R.
Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7|
topic_facet geo
envir
description The Earth’s aurorae radiate away up to 1% of their energy in the form of radio waves, called Auroral Kilometric Radiation (AKR). The mechanism responsible for the emission, the electron cyclotron maser (ECM), produces similar emissions at other planets, in the solar atmosphere, and in astrophysical systems. AKR was not unambiguously identified until the 1970’s because its detection requires a suitably instrumented satellite. The ECM theory predicts radiation beamed outward that cannot penetrate the increasing magnetic field and electron density near the Earth. Nevertheless, there have been observations over the years of AKR-like radio signals detected by ground-based, rocket-borne, and low-earth orbiting satellite-borne instruments, raising the question of whether a mechanism exists by which AKR can penetrate to low altitudes. Here we show the first unambiguous evidence that AKR indeed penetrates to low altitudes on occasions. We identified three examples of AKR-like emissions detected with a ground-based radio receiver at South Pole Station, Antarctica, during a 9-day interval in July, 2004, when the Geotail satellite, monitoring AKR, had a field of view including the auroral field lines above the station. The AKR-like emissions detected at ground-level have the same frequenc–time structure as simultaneous AKR emissions detected on Geotail 115,000-190,000 km away from the Earth. Slight differences in the frequency extent of the emissions at the two locations can be explained by, for example, plasmaspheric screening of the emissions detected by Geotail. These observations represent the first coincident detections of AKR in space and on the ground. They require the existence of an as-yet unidentified mechanism to produce the ground-level emissions which are not predicted by ECM theory, they suggest that previous AKR-like emissions observed at low altitudes may indeed be AKR, and they require revision of the widely-held view that AKR is only detectable from space.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Labelle, J.
Anderson, R. R.
author_facet Labelle, J.
Anderson, R. R.
author_sort Labelle, J.
title Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7|
title_short Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7|
title_full Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7|
title_fullStr Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7|
title_full_unstemmed Ground-Level Detection of Auroral Kilometric Radiation (abstract). Planetary Radio Emissions| PLANETARY RADIO EMISSIONS VII 7|
title_sort ground-level detection of auroral kilometric radiation (abstract). planetary radio emissions| planetary radio emissions vii 7|
publisher oeaw
publishDate 2011
url http://epub.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=7125-6inhalt/PRE-VII_39-Labelle_285-286.pdf
geographic South Pole
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South pole
genre_facet Antarc*
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op_source Elektronisches Publikationsportal der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschafte
op_relation GOid: 0xc1aa5576_0x002a1d1a
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http://epub.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=7125-6inhalt/PRE-VII_39-Labelle_285-286.pdf
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