Abstract

Simultaneous electric field and plasma observations with the low-altitude polar-orbiting satellite Injun 5 have provided a comprehensive survey of convection electric fields and their association with magnetospheric plasma phenomena. The most prominent features of the convection electric fields are reversals located at high magnetic latitudes, with generally antisunward convection poleward and sunward convection equatorward of the electric field reversal location. The electric field reversal is interpreted as the boundary between open and closed magnetic field lines. During local day the electric field reversal is observed to coincide with the equatorward boundary of the polar cusp. The plasma flow in the dayside polar cusp region is dominantly E-W, away from the stagnation point, the convection velocities typically being about 1 km/sec. At local evening, 'inverted V' electron precipitation bands are observed near or at the position of the electric field reversal. In the local late-evening sector the electric field reversal becomes less distinct, and often no single well-defined electric field reversal can be identified. In all cases the inverted V electron precipitation events are closely associated with large, typically greater than 30 mV/m, irregular electric field fluctuations with time scales of a few seconds or less.

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