05342nam 2200601 450 991081797670332120200520144314.01-119-05500-81-119-05502-4(CKB)3710000000596060(EBL)4405833(MiAaPQ)EBC4405833(Au-PeEL)EBL4405833(CaPaEBR)ebr11155980(CaONFJC)MIL897662(OCoLC)939404885(PPN)197690513(EXLCZ)99371000000059606020160607h20162016 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierLow-frequency waves in space plasmas /Andreas Keiling, Dong-Hun Lee, Valery Nakariakov, editorsWashington, District of Columbia ;Hoboken, New Jersey :American Geophysical Union :Wiley,2016.©20161 online resource (527 p.)Geophysical Monograph ;216Description based upon print version of record.1-119-05495-8 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Title Page ; Copyright Page; CONTENTS; CONTRIBUTORS; PREFACE; Section I Ionosphere ; Chapter 1 Energetic Particle-Driven ULF Waves in the Ionosphere ; 1.1. INTRODUCTION; 1.2. EARLY RADAR OBSERVATIONS; 1.3. SUPERDARN OBSERVATIONS; 1.4. DOPPLER SOUNDER OBSERVATIONS; 1.5. OBSERVATIONS FROM ALTERNATIVE INSTRUMENTATION; 1.6. SUMMARY; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 2 ULF Waves and Transients in the Topside Ionosphere ; 2.1. INTRODUCTION; 2.2. ULF WAVE OBSERVATIONS IN LEO MISSIONS; 2.3. MODELING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE ULF MAGNETIC DISTURBANCES ABOVE THE IONOSPHERE AND ON THE GROUND2.4. POSSIBILITY OF ELECTROMAGNETIC SOUNDING OF PLANETARY INTERIOR FROM LEO PROBE 2.5. ULF RESPONSE IN THE UPPER IONOSPHERE TO ATMOSPHERIC ELECTRIC DISCHARGES; 2.6. DISCUSSION: PROSPECTS OF FURTHER STUDIES; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 3 Low-Frequency Waves in HF Heating of the Ionosphere ; 3.1. INTRODUCTION; 3.2. MODELING LOW-FREQUENCY WAVES IN HF HEATING ; 3.3. HEATING IN THE HIGH-LATITUDE IONOSPHERE ; 3.4. HF HEATING IN THE MID-LATITUDE IONOSPHERE ; 3.5. KINETIC PROCESSES IN HF HEATING; 3.6. CONCLUSION; ACKNOWLEDGMENT; REFERENCES; Section II Inner MagnetosphereChapter 4 ULF Waves in the Inner Magnetosphere 4.1. INTRODUCTION; 4.2. FAST MODE WAVES; 4.3. EXTERNALLY EXCITED STANDING WAVES; 4.4. INTERNALLY EXCITED STANDING ALFVÉN WAVES; 4.5. CONCLUDING REMARKS; ACKNOWLEDGEMENT; REFERENCES; Chapter 5 EMIC Waves in the Inner Magnetosphere ; 5.1. INTRODUCTION; 5.2. EMIC WAVE GENERATION AND PROPAGATION TO THE GROUND; 5.3. EMIC WAVES CLOSE TO THE PLASMAPAUSE: STATISTICS; 5.4. EMIC WAVE DUCTING IN THE IONOSPHERE; 5.5. COMPARISON OF GROUND AND SPACE OCCURRENCE RATES; 5.6. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCESChapter 6 Relationship between Chorus and Plasmaspheric Hiss Waves 6.1. INTRODUCTION; 6.2. MODELING THE EVOLUTION OF CHORUS INTO PLASMASPHERIC HISS; 6.3. COINCIDENT OBSERVATION OF CHORUS AND HISS MODULATION; 6.4. IMAGING THE CHORUS SOURCE REGION USING PULSATING AURORA; 6.5. LOW-FREQUENCY HISS ; 6.6. HIGH L CHORUS-HISS COINCIDENT OBSERVATIONS ; 6.7. SUMMARY AND DISCUSSION; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Section III Auroral Region ; Chapter 7 ULF Waves above the Nightside Auroral Oval during Substorm Onset ; 7.1. INTRODUCTION; 7.2. WHAT IS A SUBSTORM?7.3. DISCOVERY OF A ULF WAVE EPICENTRE TO SUBSTORM ONSET 7.4. ULF WAVE EVOLUTION AND CHARACTERISTICS AT ONSET; 7.5. AURORAL BEADS, AZIMUTHAL AURORAL FLUCTUATIONS, AND THE SUBSTORM; 7.6. AZIMUTHAL AURORAL FORMS AS MEASURED BY THE THEMIS ASIS; 7.7. SPATIAL CHARACTERISTICS OF ULF WAVES AT SUBSTORM ONSET; 7.8. WHAT PHYSICAL MECHANISMS FIT THE AZIMUTHAL STRUCTURING AND EXPONENTIAL GROWTH OF THE SUBSTORM ONSET ARC?; 7.9. CONCLUSION; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 8 Relationship between Alfvén Wave and Quasi-Static Acceleration in Earth's Auroral Zone ; 8.1. INTRODUCTION8.2. AURORAL ACCELERATIONLow-frequency waves in space plasmas have been studied for several decades, and our knowledge gain has been incremental with several paradigm-changing leaps forward. In our solar system, such waves occur in the ionospheres and magnetospheres of planets, and around our Moon. They occur in the solar wind, and more recently, they have been confirmed in the Sun's atmosphere as well. The goal of wave research is to understand their generation, their propagation, and their interaction with the surrounding plasma. This book presents a concise and authoritative up-to-date look on where wave research stands: What have we learned in the last decade? What are unanswered questions?--Source other than Library of Congress.Geophysical monograph ;216.Space plasmasSpace plasmas.523.01Keiling AndreasLee Dong-HunNakariakov ValeryMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910817976703321Low-frequency waves in space plasmas4112856UNINA