aurora, substorms, and themis d. g. sibeck nasa/gsfc themis project scientist

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Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

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Page 1: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS

D. G. Sibeck

NASA/GSFC

THEMIS Project Scientist

Page 2: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Outline

• What do aurora look like?

• Where do aurora occur?

• When do aurora occur?

• Why do aurora occur?

• How will THEMIS help us understand aurora?

• Where can I find out more information?

Page 3: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Quartz Lake State Park, AlaskaSeptember 6, 1996

Page 4: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

January 6, 1998

Page 5: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Aurora in Alaska

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Page 6: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

March 11, 1998

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Page 7: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Aurora in Lapland

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Page 8: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Loomis Auroral Chart, 1860

You arehere

NorthPole

Elias Loomis

Professor,

Yale

Page 9: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

% Nights With Aurora

You can also seeaurora in

Antarctica!

You are stillhere- you havea small butfinite chanceof seeing aurora

Page 10: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Aurora over the Eastern U.S.

You are here

Sometimes theauroral ovalbrightens andexpands overthe continguousUnited States

Page 11: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Good news: Auroras come furthest equatorward here on the East Coast

Bad news: only during severe geomagnetic storms

X

Page 12: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Ground MagnetogramsExample

Summary:One Year ofKp index

Sudden CommencementCompression

StormDisturbance

27 Day Solar Rotation

Page 13: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

When Should One Look?

Spring

Fall

At or just before

midnight,

Spring or

Fall

Page 14: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

SOHO: Solar Flares and Ejecta

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Our storybegins atthe Sun

Page 15: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Solar Wind Model: Streams and Blast Waves

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Page 16: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Earth’s Magnetic Field

Page 17: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Our Magnetic Shield

Page 18: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Solar Wind Buffetting: Model

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Aurora

Page 19: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Reconnection

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Page 20: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Cause of Aurora

120 km

60 km

Page 21: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Reconnection Model

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Current Disruption

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Page 23: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

THEMIS• Science:

– Identify when and where substorms (building blocks of storms) begin

– Distinguish between competing models– Understand substorm physics

• Impact on Society– Predict when and where substorms occur– Understand and guard against substorm-related increases in

radiation belt particle flux, communication disruptions, and current surges in power/pipelines

Page 24: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

THEMIS Launch

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Page 25: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Orbital Information

• Launched at Sunset, February 17, 2007

• Presently: all 5 s/c on almost identical orbits:– 1.1 x 14.7 RE with inclination 14.4°, period 31 hours, separated by

100’s to 1000’s km– Apogees between the Sun and the Earth, studying radiation belts

and the outer boundary of the Earth’s magnetic field

• Future…each has its own special orbit to help pinpoint when and where substorm onset occurs

Page 26: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Flows

THEMIS(Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms)

distinguishes amongst competing substorm models

?Rarefaction wave

?

P2P3

P4P5

GBOP1

Careful positioning of5 well-instrumentedprobes and dedicated arrayof ground observatories

Allows us to impartiallytest two competing modelsand determine the cause ofsubstorms

Page 27: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

SPACECRAFT AND INSTRUMENTS

SST

ESAEF

IaEFIs

FGM

SCM

Tspin=3s

FIVE IDENTICALLY-INSTRUMENTEDSPACECRAFT (128 kg), EACH CARRYING:

ESA: Electrostatic analyzer measures0.003-30 keV ions/electrons (UCB)

SST: Solid state telescopes measures0.03-6 MeV ions and electrons (UCB)

FGM: Fluxgate magnetometer measures magnetic field to 128 Hz (Germany)

SCM: Search coil magnetometer measures 0.001 - 4 kHz magnetic field (France)

EFI: Electric field instrument on wires andaxial booms 0.0003 - 400 kHz (UCB)

Page 28: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

5 THEMISS/C Line Up in Tail Once/4 Days

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Sun

Page 29: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

TH-GBOs: High resolution & sensitivityOnset: 11:12:51UT, Intensification: 11:18:30UT

First on THD

Last on THE

2nd on THB

3rd on THA

Mag

neti

c F

ield

Timing a Substorm

THE

THATHBTHD

THC

Sun

March 23, 2007

Page 30: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

Dedicated Array ofUS/Canadian Ground Observatories

Provide Daily Auroral Movies

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Page 31: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

First Auroral Mosaic MovieFebruary 14, 2007

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Dedicated Array of US and Canadian Ground Stations

Page 32: Aurora, Substorms, and THEMIS D. G. Sibeck NASA/GSFC THEMIS Project Scientist

FOR MORE INFORMATION

• Principle Investigator: Vassilis Angelopoulos (NASA/JPL)

• Project Scientist: David Sibeck (NASA/GSFC)

• NASA SITE WWW.NASA.GOV/THEMIS

• SCIENCE SITE: themis.ssl.berkeley.edu

• EPO SITE: http://ds9.ssl.berkeley.edu/themis/no_flash.html