Dynamics of the Quiet Polar Cap

Abstract

Work in the past has established that a few percent of the time, under northward interplanetary magnetic field and thus magnetically quiet conditions, sun aligned arcs are found in the polar cap with intensities greater than the order of a kilo Rayleigh in the visible. Here we extend this view. We first note that imaging systems with sensitivity down to tens of Rayleighs in the visible find sun aligned arcs in the polar cap far more often, closer to half the time than a few percent. Furthermore, these sun aligned arcs have simple electrodynamics. They mark boundaries between rapid antisunward flow of ionospheric plasma on their dawn side and significantly slower flow, or even sunward flow, on their dusk side. Since the sun aligned arcs are typically the order of 1000 km to transpolar in the sun-earth direction, and the order of 100 km or less in the dawn-dusk direction, they demarcate lines of strongly anisotropic ionospheric flow shears or convection cells. The very quiet polar cap (strongly northward IMF) is in fact characterized by the presence of sun aligned arcs and multiple highly anisotropic ionospheric flow shears. Sensitive optical images are a valuable diagnostic with which to study polar ionospheric convection under these poorly understood conditions. Reprints.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Aug 22, 1990
Accession Number
ADA226265

Entities

People

  • Herbert C. Carlson Jr.

Organizations

  • Air Force Systems Command

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • C4I
  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Artificial Satellites
  • Boundaries
  • Convection
  • Electric Fields
  • Electrodynamics
  • Electron Density
  • Electron Flux
  • Electrons
  • High Latitudes
  • Images
  • Latitude
  • Magnetic Fields
  • Optical Images
  • Polar Cap
  • Polar Regions
  • Regions
  • Sensitivity

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science / Meteorology, specifically Wind Wave Turbulence.
  • Space/Atmospheric Physics.