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High-Latitude Particle Precipitation and its Relationship to Magnetospheric Source Regions
Authors:Onsager  TG  Lockwood  M
Institution:(1) Noaa Space Environment Center Boulder, Colorado, USA;(2) Rutherford Appleton Laboratory Chilton, Didcot, Oxon, England
Abstract:Two central issues in magnetospheric research are understanding the mapping of the low-altitude ionosphere to the distant regions of the magnetsphere, and understanding the relationship between the small-scale features detected in the various regions of the ionosphere and the global properties of the magnetosphere. The high-latitude ionosphere, through its magnetic connection to the outer magnetosphere, provides an important view of magnetospheric boundaries and the physical processes occurring there. All physical manifestations of this magnetic connectivity (waves, particle precipitation, etc.), however, have non-zero propagation times during which they are convected by the large-scale magnetospheric electric field, with phenomena undergoing different convection distances depending on their propagation times. Identification of the ionospheric signatures of magnetospheric regions and phenomena, therefore, can be difficult. Considerable progress has recently been made in identifying these convection signatures in data from low- and high-altitude satellites. This work has allowed us to learn much about issues such as: the rates of magnetic reconnection, both at the dayside magnetopause and in the magnetotail; particle transport across the open magnetopause; and particle acceleration at the magnetopause and the magnetotail current sheets.
Keywords:Magnetosphere  Ionosphere  Low Latitude Boundary Layer  Cusp  Mantle  Polar Rain  Plasma Sheet  Plasma Sheet Boundary Layer  Particle Precipitation
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