Currently, sci.esa.int is under review and not being updated. For the latest information and news from ESA science missions and scientific results, please visit esa.int. For a comprehensive overview of ESA’s Science Programme and its missions, please refer to science.esa.int. For in-depth technical information aimed at ESA's scientific communities, you may also wish to consult cosmos.esa.int.

Asset Publisher

Back Cluster multispacecraft determination of AKR angular beaming

Cluster multispacecraft determination of AKR angular beaming

Publication date: 10 April 2008

Authors: Mutel, R.L. et al.

Journal: Geophys. Res. Lett.
Volume: 35
Issue: 7
ID: L07104
Year: 2008

Copyright: American Geophysical Union

Simultaneous observations of AKR emission using the four-spacecraft Cluster array were used to make the first direct measurements of the angular beaming patterns of individual bursts. By comparing the spacecraft locations and AKR burst locations, the angular beaming pattern was found to be narrowly confined to a plane containing the magnetic field vector at the source and tangent to a circle of constant latitude. Most rays paths are confined within 15° of this tangent plane, consistent with numerical simulations of AKR k-vector orientation at maximum growth rate. The emission is also strongly directed upward in the tangent plane, which we interpret as refraction of the rays as they leave the auroral cavity. The narrow beaming pattern implies that an observer located above the polar cap can detect AKR emission only from a small fraction of the auroral oval at a given location. This has important consequences for interpreting AKR visibility at a given location. It also helps re-interpret previously published Cluster VLBI studies of AKR source locations, which are now seen to be only a subset of all possible source locations. The observations are inconsistent with either filled or hollow cone beaming models.

Link to publication
Last Update: Sep 1, 2019 9:08:15 AM
12-Mar-2026 16:54 UT

ShortUrl Portlet

Shortcut URL

https://sci.esa.int/s/AlLaedA

Images And Videos

Related Publications

Related Links

See Also

Documentation