1988
DOI: 10.1016/0021-9169(88)90019-0
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Observations of auroral E-region plasma waves and electron heating with EISCAT and a VHF radar interferometer

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Cited by 65 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…For observations along the electrojet (inside the FB instability cone), this question has been studied in a number of papers (e.g. Providakes et al, 1988;Haldoupis and Schlegel, 1990). There has not been so much focus on ob- servations outside the FB instability cone.…”
Section: Is Stare Velocity a Cosine Component Of Convection?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For observations along the electrojet (inside the FB instability cone), this question has been studied in a number of papers (e.g. Providakes et al, 1988;Haldoupis and Schlegel, 1990). There has not been so much focus on ob- servations outside the FB instability cone.…”
Section: Is Stare Velocity a Cosine Component Of Convection?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since usual auroral radars provide no height resolution of the backscattered power, unless interferometer techniques are used (Providakes et al, 1983(Providakes et al, , 1988, it is interesting to study the 300-m resolution data of the ALOMAR SOUSY radar in more detail. Figure 3 (upper panel) shows ®ve successive height pro®les of the backscattered power.…”
Section: Height Pro®lesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We apply a radar equation suitable for volume backscatter (Farley et al, 1981): The line styles corresponding to the dierent beam directions, indicated in the lower panel, apply to all three panels r t g 2 sk 2 q 32p 2 r 2 r (where r , t is received and transmitted echo power, g is antenna eciency, s is transmitter pulse width, k is radar wave length, G is receiver antenna gain, r is distance to the scattering volume, and r is volume backscatter cross section) to two dierent radars of comparable operating wavelength: our radar and the CUPRI radar of the Cornell group which was widely used for auroral studies (e.g. Providakes et al, 1988, additional information has been provided by J. Sahr, private communication).…”
Section: Backscattered Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[2] For some twenty years numerous radar observations demonstrate an intriguing effect of dramatically elevated electron temperature, up to three thousand Kelvin, in the auroral or subauroral (polarization) electrojets during magnetic storms [Schlegel and St.-Maurice, 1981;Providakes et al, 1988;Stauning and Olesen, 1989;Williams et al, 1992;Foster and Erickson, 2000]. Strong electron heating always correlates with a strong convection electric field E C .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, cannot heat electrons significantly more than the convection electric field E C itself and hence cannot account for the observed extreme values of the electron temperature T e . It is small components of the turbulent electric field parallel to the magnetic field, dE || , that play a crucial role in anomalous heating of electrons [St.-Maurice and Laher, 1985;Providakes et al, 1988;Milikh et al, 2001].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%