The first satellites launched to low Earth orbit (LEO) sparked a flurry of speculation about the energy sources for Earth's heated upper atmosphere. Cole (1962) asserted that Joule heating of the upper atmosphere could explain the fluctuations in orbital acceleration during geomagnetic disturbances. Sugiura (1984, 1986) deduced that high-latitude electric field, E, magnetic field, B, and their variations dB, and dE, reported by the Dynamics Explorer-2 (DE-2) mission during a magnetic storm in 1981 were consistent with electromagnetic energy transfer via the Poynting vector and that the transfer was equal to the ionospheric energy (Joule) dissipation below the satellite. Subsequent investigations have considered the Poynting vector, also called Poynting flux (PF), as a source of thermospheric disturbances. The requirement for simultaneous full-component B, E, dB, and dE measurements over a range of frequencies and locations has frustrated attempts to systematically quantify PF response to geospace disturbances. Knudsen (1990) and Kelley et al. (1991) applied Poynting's theorem to HILAT spacecraft measurements (altitude ∼800 km) of the convective electric field, E and magnetic perturbations dB relative to Earth's main field. They calculated electromagnetic energy transfer as: