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Mid-latitude pulsating auroras
Authors:William N Hall
Institution:Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories, Bedford, Massachusetts 01730, U.S.A.
Abstract:Pulsating auroras were recorded at Bedford, Massachusetts, cgm lat. 55.4°, 24 March 1969 during a worldwide magnetic storm, the only known published observations of pulsating auroras at such low magnetic latitudes. Spectral density analysis of several minutes of 5577A pulsations indicated a dominant period of 7.2 sec at 0300 EST. The following characteristics were noted: (1) occurrence during a negative bay in H; (2) location toward the equatorial boundary of the auroral display; (3) occurred a few hours after local midnight; (4) characteristic period of 6–10 sec; (5) quasi-sinusoidal or superposition of sinusoids rather than isolated pulses; (6) modulation of the background intensity by 15–30 per cent. These characteristics have previously been observed by others in pulsating auroras in the auroral oval. Other mid-latitude geophysical measurements at the same time show similarities to typical auroral oval behavior. These observations indicate that the auroral oval expanded during the worldwide magnetic storm until the boundary of the auroral oval was near cgm latitude 55°. If this observation of one mid-latitude pulsating aurora is in general valid, then the agreement of the characteristic period of pulsating auroras when the oval has expanded to mid-latitudes with the period of pulsating auroras when the oval is not expanded should be useful in distinguishing between proposed source mechanisms for these pulsating auroras.
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