Abstract
Previous studies have shown that most ion conics in the auroral zone
are associated with either broadband extremely low frequency (BBELF) or electromagnetic
ion cyclotron (EMIC) emissions. EMIC emissions, which are correlated with preferential acceleration
of He+, are concentrated in the premidnight sector; BBELF emissions, which are found at
all local times, are not associated with preferential acceleration of any species.
We present a case study of five auroral passes which include ion conics
associated with EMIC and BBELF waves at different locations.
Our data indicate that EMIC waves can be locally important
for accelerating outflowing He+ in the aurora. However, although this study's design
exaggerates the contribution of EMIC waves to transverse ion acceleration, we find in
each case that BBELF waves produce higher energy fluxes of upflowing ions. Therefore,
events with BBELF emissions dominate the overall ion outflow.
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Title Page |
Abstract |
Introduction |
Data |
Direct Comparison of Mechanisms |
Conclusion |
Acknowledgements |
References