Hemispheric Power, May 19/20, 1996
The UVI imager on
board the POLAR satellite offers the opportunity to obtain high time
resolution global auroral images. The spectral resolution of the
imager is sufficient to separate the auroral emission from the
scattered sunlight, even when the entire auroral zone is sunlit. The
energy flux of the precipitating electrons is derived from the surface
brightness through the LBH-long filter. Global images which have the dayglow
removed are spatially integrated to yield the total hemispheric
electron energy flux. This parameter, the hemispheric power, has
found much application in ionospheric modeling. It can also be
derived from electron spectra measured along the track of the NOAA/TIROS
satellites that are combined with average empirical auroral
precipitation patterns. We show that the hemispheric power input
derived from the two-dimensional images represents a substantial
improvement in the temporal variability of this parameter. We present
an example for the period of 19/20 May 1996 by comparing power indices
derived from NOAA/TIROS measurements with those derived from the UVI
images.
The solid line is the
hemispheric power from the UVI images, the short thick bars show the
hemispheric power estimates from the NOAA-TIROS 12 and 14
satellites.
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figure 3) as PostScript files.