Abstract

We examine magnetic field variations at 4–12 Hz frequencies in the upper ionosphere and on Earth. The ground response to the coherent oscillations at two SWARM satellites near and above the high frequency boundary of the nominal Pc1 range is studied. We use CARISMA data to analyze ground pulsations. Ionospheric oscillations are predominantly registered at geomagnetic latitudes above 65°, i. e. from the auroral zone to the polar cusp-cleft region. The oscillations at the same frequencies are recorded at auroral and subauroral ground stations at distances from 1500 to 3000 km from satellite footprint. Ratio RGI of the oscillation amplitude on Earth to that in the ionosphere retrieved from the observed data is compared to the values calculated for a finite radius Alfvén beam incident onto a quasi-real ionosphere. [Fedorov et al., 2018]. Radial distribution of RGI depends on the oscillation frequency and the altitude distribution of ionospheric parameters controlled mostly by season and local time. The most probable values of RGI range from 10–3 to 10–1. The RGI values obtained from the observed data agree with model ones at incident beam radius of about several hundred kilometers.

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