Abstract

Abstract. Research results about planetary-scale auroral distributions are presented in a historical retrospective, beginning with the first "maps of isochasms" – lines of equal visibility of auroras in the firmament (Fig. 2) – up to "isoaurora maps" – lines of equal occurrence frequency of auroras in the zenith (Fig. 4). The exploration of auroras in Russia from Lomonosov in the 18th century (Fig. 1) until the start of the International Geophysical Year (IGY) in 1957 is shortly summed up. A generalised pattern of discrete auroral forms along the auroral oval during geomagnetically very quiet intervals is presented in Fig. 5. The changes of discrete auroral forms versus local time exhibit a fixed pattern with respect to the sun. The auroral forms comprise rays near noon, homogeneous arcs during the evening, and rayed arcs and bands during the night and in the morning. This fixed auroral pattern is unsettled during disturbances, which occur sometimes even during very quiet intervals. The azimuths of extended auroral forms vary with local time. Such variations in the orientation of extended forms above stations in the auroral zone have been used by various investigators to determine the position of the auroral oval (Fig. 9). Auroral luminosity of the daytime and nighttime sectors differ owing to different luminosity forms, directions of motion of the discrete forms, the height of the luminescent layers, and the spectral composition (predominant red emissions during daytime and green emissions during the night). Schemes that summarise principal peculiarities of daytime luminosity, its structure in MLT (magnetic local time) and MLat (magnetic latitude) coordinates, and the spectral composition of the luminosity are presented in Figs. 15 and 19. We discuss in detail the daytime sector dynamics of individual discrete forms for both quiet conditions and auroral substorms. The most important auroral changes during substorms occur in the nighttime sector. We present the evolution of conceptions about the succession of discrete auroral forms and their dynamics during disturbance intervals. This ranges from Birkeland's polar elementary storms, over the prospect of a fixed auroral pattern up to the auroral substorm model. The classic schemes of the spatial distribution and motion of discrete auroral forms during single substorms are shown in Fig. 20 (expansive and recovery phases) and Fig. 21 (creation, expansive and recovery phases). In this review we discuss various models of bulge formation, in particular as a result of new formation of arcs about 50–100 km poleward of previously existing auroral structures (Fig. 24). Discrete steps in the development of an expanding bulge are separated by 1–3 min from each other. The model of successive activations confines only to a ~40° longitudinal portion of the magnetotail (Fig. 28). We consider differences in the development of single substorms and substorms during magnetic storms. The structure and dynamics of auroras during steady magnetospheric convection (SMC) periods are dealt with in Sect. 8. A generalised scheme of the auroral distribution during SMC periods is shown in Fig. 34. Separate sections describe discrete auroras in the polar cap (Sect. 5), and the diffuse luminosity equatorward of the auroral oval (Sect. 9). Visual observations of diffuse auroral forms at midlatitudes suggest that the whole latitudinal interval between the auroral oval and the stable auroral red (SAR) arc is filled up with diffuse luminosity. SAR arcs with intensities of several tens of Rayleigh enclose systematically the region of diffuse luminosity; they are positioned at the border of the plasmasphere.

Highlights

  • The aurorae, which appear as a conspicuous play of colours, a wide changeability of forms and fast variations of luminosity, have always attracted the fascination and amazement of people that entered the Arctic or Antarctic circle of latitudes for the first time

  • Visual observations of diffuse auroral forms at midlatitudes suggest that the whole latitudinal interval between the auroral oval and the stable auroral red (SAR) arc is filled up with diffuse luminosity

  • The diffuse luminosity is observed from the geomagnetic pole to midlatitudes and is generated by different corpuscular sources: (1) the homogeneous luminescence in the polar cap is due to the precipitation of solar protons with energies of several hundreds of megaelectronvolts or electron fluxes with energies less than 1 keV from parts of the magnetospheric tail and/or the solar wind; (2) diffuse luminosity due to the precipitation of protons or electrons with auroral energy at auroral latitudes; and (3) diffuse luminosity due to soft electron precipitations at midlatitudes, including an intensification of red emissions near the plasmapause

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Summary

Introduction

The aurorae, which appear as a conspicuous play of colours, a wide changeability of forms and fast variations of luminosity, have always attracted the fascination and amazement of people that entered the Arctic or Antarctic circle of latitudes for the first time. Bright forms of aurorae appear during nighttime hours most likely at geomagnetic latitudes of ∼ 67–75◦. The fluxes of energetic electrons are guided by the geomagnetic field lines in their downward motion into the atmosphere They suffer elastic and inelastic collisions, transfer their energy to the neutral particles during processes of dissociation, ionisation, and excitation with subsequent emissions and give likewise rise to atmospheric heating. From top to bottom: (I) Homogeneous auroral arc, (II) rayed arc, (III) long auroral rays, (IV) corona – emissions along the magnetic field lines, (V) drapery – ribbon-like auroral forms, (VI) simultaneous green and red auroral emissions at different heights, and (VII) sunlit aurora. When the ribbon becomes somehow more active and moving it forms tiny surges of a few kilometres in thickness Such a form of luminosity seems to consist of individual stretched rays or light beams; in this case it is called “rayed arc”.

A look at the Russian history
Planetary distribution of discrete auroral forms
Discrete auroras during magnetic quietness and the arc orientations
Auroral luminosity in the daytime sector
Auroral substorms
Behaviour of the discrete auroral forms
Fine structure of substorms
Nighttime diffuse luminosity equatorward of the auroral oval
Findings
10 Conclusions
Full Text
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