Scintillation at high latitudes during winter magnetic storms |
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Affiliation: | 1. Amref International University, Nairobi 27691-00506, Kenya;2. Global Programs for Research and Training, Affiliate of the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | Scintillation observations are described which were made at Kiruna in northern Sweden during three magnetic storm periods in the winter of 1984–1985. The results were obtained using transmissions from the multisatellite NNSS system, so that it has been possible to chart the development of scintillation activity over some 20° of geomagnetic latitude as a function of time for several days throughout each storm. A region of strong scintillation at the highest latitudes near magnetic noon is a common feature on all but the quietest days. This feature, probably associated with soft particle precipitation into the cusp, shows an abrupt boundary which moves equatorwards as the disturbance develops. In the magnetic midnight sector two latitudinally separate zones of scintillation are found, patchy at high latitudes although more sustained in the auroral zone. An absence of auroral scintillations around midnight UT can be followed by prolonged intense scintillation activity at auroral latitudes during the early morning hours on some disturbed days. |
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