Forty-five months of continuous spacecraft potential measurements from the Polar satellite are used to study the average electron density in the magnetosphere and its dependence on geomagnetic activity and season. These measurements offer a straightforward, passive method for monitoring the total electron density in the magnetosphere, with high time resolution and a density range that covers many orders of magnitude. Within its polar orbit with geocentric perigee and apogee of 1.8 and 9.0 RE, respectively, Polar encounters a number of key plasma regions of the magnetosphere, such as the polar cap, cusp, plasmapause, and auroral zone that are clearly identified in the statistical averages presented here. The polar cap den...
[1] The tilt and offset of the Earth’s magnetic field can significantly affect the longitudinal and ...
18th EISCAT symposiumSession E3: Ionoshere/thermosphere/mesosphereMay 27 (Sat), Poster Sessio
The influence of the season on the patch-to-background density ratio of polar cap patches in the nig...
International audienceForty-five months of continuous spacecraft potential measurements from the Pol...
Using spacecraft potential measurements of the Polar electric field experiment, we investigate ele...
International audienceUsing spacecraft potential measurements of the Polar electric field experiment...
Seven years of measurements from the Polar spacecraft are surveyed to monitor the variations of plas...
Before the IMAGE mission, electron densities in the high latitude, high altitude region of the magne...
Seven years of measurements from the Polar spacecraft are surveyed to monitor the variations of plas...
We study the altitude dependence of plasma depletions above the auroral region in the 5000–30 000 ...
We investigated electron density enhancements at ~9000 km altitude and ion flows in the polar magnet...
The Cluster-mission has enabled a study of the near-Earth magnetospheric lobes throughout the wanin...
This study employs observations from several sources to determine the location of the polar cap ...
One of the primary mechanisms of loss of Earth's atmosphere is the persistent “cold” ( urn:x-wiley:j...
The tilt and offset of the Earth's magnetic field can significantly affect the longitudinal and seas...
[1] The tilt and offset of the Earth’s magnetic field can significantly affect the longitudinal and ...
18th EISCAT symposiumSession E3: Ionoshere/thermosphere/mesosphereMay 27 (Sat), Poster Sessio
The influence of the season on the patch-to-background density ratio of polar cap patches in the nig...
International audienceForty-five months of continuous spacecraft potential measurements from the Pol...
Using spacecraft potential measurements of the Polar electric field experiment, we investigate ele...
International audienceUsing spacecraft potential measurements of the Polar electric field experiment...
Seven years of measurements from the Polar spacecraft are surveyed to monitor the variations of plas...
Before the IMAGE mission, electron densities in the high latitude, high altitude region of the magne...
Seven years of measurements from the Polar spacecraft are surveyed to monitor the variations of plas...
We study the altitude dependence of plasma depletions above the auroral region in the 5000–30 000 ...
We investigated electron density enhancements at ~9000 km altitude and ion flows in the polar magnet...
The Cluster-mission has enabled a study of the near-Earth magnetospheric lobes throughout the wanin...
This study employs observations from several sources to determine the location of the polar cap ...
One of the primary mechanisms of loss of Earth's atmosphere is the persistent “cold” ( urn:x-wiley:j...
The tilt and offset of the Earth's magnetic field can significantly affect the longitudinal and seas...
[1] The tilt and offset of the Earth’s magnetic field can significantly affect the longitudinal and ...
18th EISCAT symposiumSession E3: Ionoshere/thermosphere/mesosphereMay 27 (Sat), Poster Sessio
The influence of the season on the patch-to-background density ratio of polar cap patches in the nig...