A class of high‐m pulsations and its auroral radar signature
1992
Bistatic Auroral Radar System radar events showing a repetitive equatorward (or radarward) traveling band signature in the range-time-intensity plots have been analyzed. The associated pulsations have many features in common with previously reported high-m storm time Pc 5 pulsations. The periods, azimuthal wave numbers (m), Dst dependence, and polarization ellipses are similar. One difference is also seen. The pulsation phase velocity of our events often has a significant equatorward component in the ionosphere. However, of the three cases for which the phase velocity direction in the magnetospheric equatorial plane was determined, one had phase velocities close to azimuthal at both locations, one had an azimuthal phase velocity in the magnetosphere but an equatorward component of the phase velocity in the ionosphere, and the final event had equatorward or inward components of phase velocity at both locations. These events are very similar to the equatorward traveling bands events observed by the Sweden and Britain Auroral Radar Experiment system (Tian et al., 1991; Yeoman et al., 1992) except that our m values are distinctly larger. If coupling to energetic protons is involved in exciting these pulsations, this difference implies that the energy of the protons involved decreases with increasing L of the interaction location. Finally, our data do not lend themselves to the plasmapause field line resonance interpretation of Tian et al. (1991).
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