explanation      blue bibcodes open ADS page with paths to full text
Author name code: haerendel
ADS astronomy entries on 2022-09-14
author:"Haerendel, Gerhard" 

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Title: The Onset of a Substorm and the Mating Instability
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard; Frey, Harald
2021JGRA..12629492H    Altcode:
  The paper underlines the view that the appearance of beading and its
  nonlinear growth in the onset arc occurs independently from the onset
  of reconnection in the tail at about 20 R<SUB>E</SUB>. Both events
  follow from an extreme thinning of the central current sheet of the
  tail at the end of the growth phase. Subsequently, we concentrate on
  the processes connected with the onset arc breakup. Its origin lies in
  the instability of a high-beta plasma layer building up at the outer
  boundary of the dipolar magnetosphere during the substorm growth phase,
  the growth phase arc (GPA) being the ionospheric trace. The observation
  of auroral streamers triggering the onset arc instability lets us
  analyze what is known about auroral streamers with strong support
  from high-resolution videos of two substorm onsets. We conclude that
  they may be low-entropy content bubbles with a balanced field-aligned
  current system, framing a flow channel. However, there are unresolved
  questions. The visible streamer is identified as an Alfvénic arc. In
  searching for a mechanism by which a streamer bubble lining up along
  the GPA can trigger the instability, we are led to the recognition
  that an entirely new non-MHD process must be at work. Taking also into
  account the surprising fact that the beads are moving oppositely to the
  convection in GPA and auroral streamer, we postulate the appearance of
  a new current system in the gap between the two. What happens can be
  described as the mating of two current sheets, which were completely
  separated before. It breaks the stability of the high-beta plasma layer
  and channels the release and conversion of free internal energy. For
  this reason, we name the process mating instability. A physical analysis
  of this process shows consistency with detailed features exhibited by
  the two videos

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Title: Results of the Electron Drift Instrument on Cluster
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Quinn, J. M.; Torbert, R. B.; McIlwain, C. E.;
   Vaith, H.; Haaland, S.; Matsui, H.; Kletzing, C. A.; Baumjohann, W.;
   Haerendel, G.
2021JGRA..12629313P    Altcode:
  The electron drift instrument (EDI) on Cluster pioneered a new method
  of measuring electric fields, using a beam of electrons to sample the
  drift velocity over a km-scale gyro orbit. The technique is especially
  well suited to measuring weak, sub-mV/m, convection fields due to
  its sensitivity (to both components in the plane perpendicular to B)
  and because it is unaffected by the anomalous local electric fields
  that are generated by spacecraft-plasma interactions. Because EDI
  requires exquisite beam pointing with active tracking of the firing
  directions, measurements are less regular, or even impossible, in
  rapidly varying electric and magnetic fields; however, in the many
  regimes where tracking is successful the resulting measurements are
  reliably accurate. We review the EDI technique and instrumentation,
  and present six areas of investigation using Cluster data: (1)
  Detailed comparisons of EDI data with the electric field and waves
  double probe measurements show excellent agreement in many cases but
  identify large discrepancies where strong ion outflow in the polar
  regions creates local spacecraft wake effects. (2) The wake effect is
  exploited to infer quantitative ion outflow rates. Detailed convection
  patterns in the (3) polar cap, (4) lobe, and (5) inner magnetosphere
  are derived under various driver conditions using statistical analyses
  of long term measurements during the Cluster mission. (6) EDI's large
  geometric-factor detector is used for extremely high time resolution
  measurements of electrons at a specified energy and pitch angle.

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Title: Auroral Arcs: The Fracture Theory Revisited
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2021JGRA..12628194H    Altcode:
  The fracture theory for auroral arcs, developed by the author since
  1980, compares the decoupling of the magnetic field from the ionosphere
  by the auroral acceleration region (AAR) with the breaking of a solid
  rod. In the latter elastic energy stored by the bending is converted
  into kinetic energy of the stress release motion. Similarly, magnetic
  energy stored in sheared magnetic fields is temporarily converted into
  stress release motions and finally transported as Poynting flux into the
  AAR. The fracture theory has been especially applied to arcs embedded in
  the convection of the evening auroral oval. The present study subjects
  the different steps in the fracture process to a critical analysis in
  the light of new physical insights. This boils down to a revision of the
  illustrating cartoon used in the earlier publications, without having
  affecting the quantitative evaluations. The first revision concerns
  the height extent of the AAR. It must be largely increased. The second
  revision introduces a nearly 2 D magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) turbulence
  into the state of the AAR. This is supported by high altitude electric
  field data and leads to new view of auroral rays. The third revision
  describes the transition from the AAR to the ionosphere as structured by
  so called potential fingers, which contain substantial fractions of the
  total field parallel potential drop. The most important modification
  pertains to the average U shaped potential of a spontaneously
  propagating AAR. While the leading edge of the auroral current sheet
  is structured by stress release motions, the reverse flow in the rear
  section escapes simple interpretation. It is proposed that this flow
  is driven by a turbulent transport of reversed momentum from front
  to rear in response to the incompressibility of the magnetic field in
  the acceleration region. This leads to a revision of the field aligned
  currents and wavefield in the rear of the arc.

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Title: Expanding Auroral Loops
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2019JGRA..124.8629H    Altcode:
  A new scenario is presented for the energy supply to the auroral
  acceleration process. It applies to auroral arcs, which are propagating
  into regions of magnetic fields with shears with lower than those
  existing behind the arc. This pertains in particular to expanding
  U-loops or other active protrusions. A Poynting flux, emerging out of
  the interior of the associated current system with strongly sheared
  field, flows into the auroral acceleration region or fracture zone. One
  half of the energy is consumed by the acceleration process. The other
  half flows (mainly upward) into the current sheet and is expended
  by shearing the newly incorporated field into the direction of the
  internal field. This is enabled by the magnetic connectivity being
  broken inside the region of parallel electric potential drops. The
  latter are formally attributed to the presence of an anomalous
  resistivity in the auroral current sheet. Simple relations describe
  the energy transport and consumption. An important quantity is the
  width of the arc. It follows from the balance of the energy transport
  inside and out of the acceleration region. Since the process involves
  first breaking of the field lines, to be followed by building up shear
  stresses, the name "constructive magnetic fractures" has been chosen
  for distinguishing it from "destructive fractures," which applies to
  embedded arcs. Which of these two processes is acting can be easily
  recognized by the direction of motion of the auroral rays or folds,
  whether they are opposed to or in parallel with the convective flow
  behind the arc.

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Title: Experiments with Plasmas artificially injected into near-Earth
    Space
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2019FrASS...6...29H    Altcode:
  Plasma injection experiments in space are being ordered according to
  five aspects: (1) Diagnostics of electric fields, (2) Coupling to the
  ionosphere, (3) Interactions with the solar wind, (4) Modification
  experiments, and (5) Special physical processes. Historically first
  were releases of neutral gases with the aim to measure atmospheric
  parameters. They were soon followed by plasma injections applied to the
  measurement of plasma flows and parallel electric fields. Long-range
  coupling to the environment was a most important aspect of the plasma
  releases. It concerned, on the one hand, the need for corrections of the
  derived diagnostic parameters and, on the other hand, the understanding
  of the formation of the ubiquitous striations and deformations of
  the plasma clouds. A special application was the investigation of
  cometary interactions by releases in the solar wind. Modification
  experiments in the ionosphere were done intentionally or occurred
  as byproducts of rocket launches or other activities. A particular
  goal was to trigger natural large-scale ionospheric instabilities
  like equatorial spread F in order to improve the understanding of the
  natural phenomena. Large-scale plasma injections in the magnetosphere
  have been performed in order to change the conditions of wave-particle
  interactions and potentially trigger observable effects. Special
  goals were so-called skidding experiments and testing Alfvén's
  critical ionization velocity effect. In this review we will emphasize
  the principle objectives and illustrate the results from selected
  experiments.

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Title: Dying Flow Bursts as Generators of the Substorm Current Wedge
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2018cosp...42E1345H    Altcode:
  Many theories or conjectures exist on the driver of the substorm current
  wedge, e.g. rerouting of the tail current, current disruption, flow
  braking, vortex formation, and current sheet collapse. Magnitude,
  spatial scale, and temporal development of the related magnetic
  perturbations suggest that the generator is related to the interaction
  of the flow bursts with the dipolar magnetosphere after onset of
  reconnection in the near-Earth tail. The question remains how much
  of the energy feeding the wedge current is derived from flow braking
  and how much is contributed by the internal energy of the arriving
  plasma. In this presentation I argue that after flow braking the plasma
  attaching to the outer magnetosphere still contributes to current
  generation. The generator current is the grad-B current at the outer
  boundary of high-beta plasma compressed by the contracting magnetic
  field. It needs the sequential arrival of several flow bursts to
  account for duration and magnitude of the ionospheric closure current.

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Title: Reconnection mediated by Magnetic Fractures and the Solar Flare
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2018cosp...42E1346H    Altcode:
  Reconnection of sheared magnetic fields is commonly treated by regarding
  the component perpendicular to the anti-parallel components as a
  largely inert guide field. In this paper an alternative is proposed in
  which the free energy residing in the shear field is being converted
  prior to reconnection. This happens in high-density, dissipative
  current sheets bordering the reconnection site. A global scenario
  is presented in which low-intensity currents out of the photosphere
  are converging into the narrow, high-intensity currents at high
  altitude. This is enabled by the obliqueness of the latter. The very
  short time-scale of the energy conversion causes a lateral propagation
  of the current sheets. In a quasi-stationary situation, it balances the
  reconnection rate, which turns out to be much lower than in guide-field
  approaches. Another important consequence of the obliqueness is the
  field-parallel emission of runaway electrons. Accelerated up to tens
  of keV, they are possibly important contributors to the production
  of hard X-rays during the impulsive phase of a flare, however only in
  areas of upward directed currents. Quantitative evaluation of the model
  predicts various potentially observable properties, such as width and
  propagation speed of the generated flare ribbons, spatial dependences
  of the electron spectrum, size of the area of energy deposition,
  and successive decrease of the shear angle between conjugate foot
  points. The presented theoretical model can account for the observed
  brightness asymmetry of flare ribbons with respect to the direction
  of the vertical currents.

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Title: Reconnection mediated by Magnetic Fractures and the Solar Flare
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2018tess.conf11404H    Altcode:
  Reconnection of sheared magnetic fields is commonly treated by regarding
  the component perpendicular to the anti-parallel components as a
  largely inert guide field. In this paper an alternative is proposed in
  which the free energy residing in the shear field is being converted
  prior to reconnection. This happens in high-density, dissipative
  current sheets bordering the reconnection site. A global scenario
  is presented in which low-intensity currents out of the photosphere
  are converging into the narrow, high-intensity currents at high
  altitude. This is enabled by the obliqueness of the latter. The very
  short time-scale of the energy conversion causes a lateral propagation
  of the current sheets. In a quasi-stationary situation, it balances the
  reconnection rate, which turns out to be much lower than in guide-field
  approaches. Another important consequence of the obliqueness is the
  field-parallel emission of runaway electrons. Accelerated up to tens
  of keV, they are possibly important contributors to the production
  of hard X-rays during the impulsive phase of a flare, however only in
  areas of upward directed currents. Quantitative evaluation of the model
  predicts various potentially observable properties, such as width and
  propagation speed of the generated flare ribbons, spatial dependences
  of the electron spectrum, size of the area of energy deposition,
  and successive decrease of the shear angle between conjugate foot
  points. The presented theoretical model can account for the observed
  brightness asymmetry of flare ribbons with respect to the direction
  of the vertical currents.

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Title: Reconnection Mediated by Magnetic Fractures and the Solar Flare
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2018ApJ...855...95H    Altcode:
  Reconnection of sheared magnetic fields is commonly treated by regarding
  the component perpendicular to the antiparallel components as a largely
  inert guide field. In this paper an alternative is proposed in which
  the free energy residing in the shear field is being converted prior to
  reconnection. This happens in high-density, dissipative current sheets
  bordering the reconnection site. A global scenario is presented in which
  low-intensity currents out of the photosphere are converging into the
  narrow, high-intensity currents at high altitude. This is enabled by
  the obliqueness of the latter. The very short timescale of the energy
  conversion causes a lateral propagation of the current sheets. In a
  quasi-stationary situation, it balances the reconnection rate, which
  turns out to be much lower than in guide-field approaches. Another
  important consequence of the obliqueness is the field-parallel emission
  of runaway electrons. Accelerated up to tens of keV, they are possibly
  important contributors to the production of hard X-rays during the
  impulsive phase of a flare, but only in areas of upward-directed
  currents. Quantitative evaluation of the model predicts various
  potentially observable properties, such as width and propagation speed
  of the generated flare ribbons, spatial dependences of the electron
  spectrum, size of the area of energy deposition, and successive
  decrease of the shear angle between conjugate footpoints. The presented
  theoretical model can account for the observed brightness asymmetry
  of flare ribbons with respect to the direction of the vertical currents.

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Title: Evidence for Field-parallel Electron Acceleration in Solar
    Flares
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2017ApJ...847..113H    Altcode:
  It is proposed that the coincidence of higher brightness and upward
  electric current observed by Janvier et al. during a flare indicates
  electron acceleration by field-parallel potential drops sustained by
  extremely strong field-aligned currents of the order of 10<SUP>4</SUP>
  A m<SUP>-2</SUP>. A consequence of this is the concentration of the
  currents in sheets with widths of the order of 1 m. The high current
  density suggests that the field-parallel potential drops are maintained
  by current-driven anomalous resistivity. The origin of these currents
  remains a strong challenge for theorists.

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Title: Field-parallel Acceleration: Comment on the Paper
“Electric Currents on the Flare Ribbons: Observations
    and Standard Model” by Janvier et al. (2014, <A
href="https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/788/1/60">ApJ, 788, 60</A>)
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2017ApJ...847..143H    Altcode:
  It is proposed that the coincidence of higher brightness and upward
  electric current observed by Janvier et al. during a flare indicates
  electron acceleration by field-parallel potential drops sustained
  by extremely strong field-aligned currents of order 10<SUP>4</SUP>
  A m<SUP>-2</SUP>. A few consequences are discussed here.

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Title: Joint two-point observations of LF-waves at
    67P/Churyumov—Gerasimenko
Authors: Heinisch, Philip; Auster, H. -U.; Richter, I.; Haerendel,
   G.; Apathy, I.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Cupido, E.; Glassmeier, K. -H.
2017MNRAS.469S..68H    Altcode:
  After the Rosetta mission reached its target comet
  67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the lander Philae touched down on the surface
  on 2014 November 12. During the First-Science-Sequence after touchdown
  the lander magnetometer ROMAP and the orbiter magnetometer RPC-MAG
  were both operating simultaneously which allowed for in situ magnetic
  two-point observations of the comet. This analysis aims at determining
  the characteristics of the low-frequency plasma waves present in the
  nucleus surface region, including frequency, propagation direction
  and velocity. These waves propagate predominantly from the nucleus
  towards the Sun with a mean phase velocity of ∼5.3 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>,
  a wavelength of ∼660 km and an average frequency of ∼8 mHz.

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Title: Mechanical and electrostatic experiments with dust particles
    collected in the inner coma of comet 67P by COSIMA onboard Rosetta
Authors: Hilchenbach, Martin; Fischer, Henning; Langevin, Yves;
   Merouane, Sihane; Paquette, John; Rynö, Jouni; Stenzel, Oliver;
   Briois, Christelle; Kissel, Jochen; Koch, Andreas; Schulz, Rita;
   Silen, Johan; Altobelli, Nicolas; Baklouti, Donia; Bardyn, Anais;
   Cottin, Herve; Engrand, Cecile; Fray, Nicolas; Haerendel, Gerhard;
   Henkel, Hartmut; Höfner, Herwig; Hornung, Klaus; Lehto, Harry;
   Mellado, Eva Maria; Modica, Paola; Le Roy, Lena; Siljeström, Sandra;
   Steiger, Wolfgang; Thirkell, Laurent; Thomas, Roger; Torkar, Klaus;
   Varmuza, Kurt; Zaprudin, Boris
2017RSPTA.37560255H    Altcode:
  The in situ cometary dust particle instrument COSIMA (COmetary
  Secondary Ion Mass Analyser) onboard ESA's Rosetta mission has
  collected about 31 000 dust particles in the inner coma of comet
  67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko since August 2014. The particles are
  identified by optical microscope imaging and analysed by time-of-flight
  secondary ion mass spectrometry. After dust particle collection by
  low speed impact on metal targets, the collected particle morphology
  points towards four families of cometary dust particles. COSIMA is
  an in situ laboratory that operates remotely controlled next to the
  comet nucleus. The particles can be further manipulated within the
  instrument by mechanical and electrostatic means after their collection
  by impact. The particles are stored above 0°C in the instrument and the
  experiments are carried out on the refractory, ice-free matter of the
  captured cometary dust particles. An interesting particle morphology
  class, the compact particles, is not fragmented on impact. One of
  these particles was mechanically pressed and thereby crushed into large
  fragments. The particles are good electrical insulators and transform
  into rubble pile agglomerates by the application of an energetic indium
  ion beam during the secondary ion mass spectrometry analysis. <P />This
  article is part of the themed issue 'Cometary science after Rosetta'.

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Title: Shock aurora: Field-aligned discrete structures moving along
    the dawnside oval
Authors: Zhou, Xiaoyan; Haerendel, Gerhard; Moen, Jøran I.;
   Trondsen, Espen; Clausen, Lasse; Strangeway, Robert J.; Lybekk,
   Bjørn; Lorentzen, Dag A.
2017JGRA..122.3145Z    Altcode:
  Generated by interplanetary shocks or solar wind pressure pulses, shock
  aurora has transient, global, and dynamic significances and provides
  a direct manifestation of the solar wind-magnetosphere-ionosphere
  interaction. As a part of a series of studies of the shock aurora,
  this paper focuses on the interaction at the morning magnetopause
  and its auroral manifestation at 06 magnetic local time, where the
  velocity and magnetic field shears dominate the interaction. Flow
  shears can generate wave-like structures inside a viscous boundary
  layer or even larger-scale vortices. These structures couple to the
  ionosphere via quasi-static field-aligned currents or via kinetic
  Alfvén waves. Potential drops along field-aligned filaments may be
  generated accelerating electrons to form auroral manifestations of
  the structures. A shock aurora event at dawnside is used to test this
  scenario. The findings include moving auroral streaks/rays that have
  a vertical profile from red (at 250 km altitude) to purple (at 100
  km). The streaks moved antisunward along the poleward boundary of the
  oval at an ionospheric speed of 3 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. It was mapped to
  the magnetopause flank at 133 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>, which was consistent
  with the observed speed of the magnetopause surface waves generated by
  the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. The calculated field-aligned potential
  drop using Haerendel's analytic model was 5 kV that reasonably explained
  the observations. The results support the above scenario and reveal
  that magnetic and velocity shears at the flanks of the magnetospause
  may be the main cause of the fast moving shock aurora streaks.

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Title: ROSETTA/COSIMA at comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko - 2 years
    of in-situ dust analysis
Authors: Schulz, Rita; Hilchenbach, Martin; Kissel, Jochen; Langevin,
   Yves; Briois, Christelle; Koch, Andreas; Silen, Johan; Baklouti, Donia;
   Bardyn, Anais; Cottin, Herve'; Engrand, Cecile; Fischer, Henning; Fray,
   Nicolas; Glasmachers, Albrecht; Gruen, Eberhard; Haerendel, Gerhard;
   Henkel, Hartmut; Höfner, Hervig; Hornung, Klaus; Jessberger, Elmar;
   Lehto, Harry J.; Letho, Kirsi; Ligier, Nicolas; Merouane, Sihane;
   Orthous-Daunay, Francois-Regis; Paquette, John; Raulin, F.; Le Roy,
   Léna; Rynö, Jouni; Siljeström, Sandra; Steiger, Wolfgang; Stenzel,
   Oliver; Stephan, Thomas; Thirkell, Laurent; Thomas, Roger; Torkar,
   Klaus; Varmuza, Kurt; Wanczek, Karl-Peter; Zaprudin, Boris
2016DPS....4811605S    Altcode:
  In August 2014 the ROSETTA spacecraft rendezvoused with comet
  67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and escorted it for more than 2 years
  along its orbit around the Sun from 4 AU preperihelion to 4 AU
  postperihelion. During this time the COSIMA instrument (COmetary
  Secondary Ion Mass Analyser) onboard ROSETTA collected more than
  25,000 dust particles in the vicinity of the comet nucleus. All these
  particles were collected on a number of specially designed metal target
  plates which were regularly imaged with a microscope (14 µm pixel/pixel
  resolution, 14mm x 14mm FOV) enabling the analysis of their individual
  morphologies, certain physical properties, e.g. tensile strength,
  albedo, as well as the overall flux and size distribution of the dust
  entering the COSIMA instrument. The images were also used to choose
  which of the particles shall go through compositional measurements with
  the time-of-flight mass spectrometer (sometimes repeated at a later
  time). All these investigations were done over 2 years. This allows to
  study the compositional and morphological differences of the particles
  collected at the various sections of the pre- and postperihelion orbit,
  the evolution of the morphology of the particles on the target plate
  with time, and the search for spatial heterogeneity of the composition
  within a particle by taking mass spectra at different locations on the
  same particle. An overview will be given on the available data and the
  results obtained so far in view to the analysis of dust composition and
  morphology, as well as dust flux and size distribution along the orbit.

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Title: High-molecular-weight organic matter in the particles of
    comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Authors: Fray, Nicolas; Bardyn, Anaïs; Cottin, Hervé; Altwegg,
   Kathrin; Baklouti, Donia; Briois, Christelle; Colangeli, Luigi;
   Engrand, Cécile; Fischer, Henning; Glasmachers, Albrecht; Grün,
   Eberhard; Haerendel, Gerhard; Henkel, Hartmut; Höfner, Herwig;
   Hornung, Klaus; Jessberger, Elmar K.; Koch, Andreas; Krüger,
   Harald; Langevin, Yves; Lehto, Harry; Lehto, Kirsi; Le Roy, Léna;
   Merouane, Sihane; Modica, Paola; Orthous-Daunay, François-Régis;
   Paquette, John; Raulin, François; Rynö, Jouni; Schulz, Rita;
   Silén, Johan; Siljeström, Sandra; Steiger, Wolfgang; Stenzel,
   Oliver; Stephan, Thomas; Thirkell, Laurent; Thomas, Roger; Torkar,
   Klaus; Varmuza, Kurt; Wanczek, Karl-Peter; Zaprudin, Boris; Kissel,
   Jochen; Hilchenbach, Martin
2016Natur.538...72F    Altcode:
  The presence of solid carbonaceous matter in cometary dust was
  established by the detection of elements such as carbon, hydrogen,
  oxygen and nitrogen in particles from comet 1P/Halley. Such matter
  is generally thought to have originated in the interstellar medium,
  but it might have formed in the solar nebula—the cloud of gas and
  dust that was left over after the Sun formed. This solid carbonaceous
  material cannot be observed from Earth, so it has eluded unambiguous
  characterization. Many gaseous organic molecules, however, have
  been observed; they come mostly from the sublimation of ices at the
  surface or in the subsurface of cometary nuclei. These ices could
  have been formed from material inherited from the interstellar medium
  that suffered little processing in the solar nebula. Here we report
  the in situ detection of solid organic matter in the dust particles
  emitted by comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko the carbon in this organic
  material is bound in very large macromolecular compounds, analogous
  to the insoluble organic matter found in the carbonaceous chondrite
  meteorites. The organic matter in meteorites might have formed in
  the interstellar medium and/or the solar nebula, but was almost
  certainly modified in the meteorites’ parent bodies. We conclude
  that the observed cometary carbonaceous solid matter could have the
  same origin as the meteoritic insoluble organic matter, but suffered
  less modification before and/or after being incorporated into the comet.

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Title: Composition of Dust Particles Collected in the Inner Coma of
    Comet 67P/Churymumo-Gerasimenko by Rosetta
Authors: Hilchenbach, M.; Kissel, J.; Langevin, Y.; Briois, C.; Koch,
   A.; Schulz, R.; Silen, J.; Altobelli, N.; Altwegg, K.; Baklouti, D.;
   Bardyn, A.; Colangeli, L.; Cottin, H.; Engrand, C.; Fischer, H.; Fray,
   N.; Glasmachers, A.; Grün, E.; Haerendel, G.; Henkel, H.; Höfner,
   H.; Hornung, K.; Jessberger, E. -K.; Lehto, H.; Ligier, N.; Martin,
   P.; Merouane, S.; Orthous-Daunay, F. -R.; Paquette, J.; Raulin,
   F.; Le Roy, L.; Rynö, J.; Silieström, S.; Steiger, W.; Stenzel,
   O.; Stephan, T.; Thirkell, L.; Thomas, R.; Torkar, K.; Varmuza, K.;
   Wanczek, K. -P.; Zaprudin, B.
2016LPICo1921.6116H    Altcode:
  The dust particle instrument COSIMA - COmetary Secondary Ion Mass
  Analyser - on board ESA’s ROSETTA mission is collecting and
  analyzing dust particles in the inner coma of Jupiter-family comet
  67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

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Title: Solar Aurora and a White Light Flare
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2016cosp...41E.784H    Altcode:
  A white light flare analyzed by Krucker et al. (2011) poses a
  severe challenge to the solar physicist because of the high energy
  fluxes implied by a hitherto not achieved spatial resolution of
  simultaneous observations with Hinode and RHESSI. A scenario based
  on the auroral acceleration mechanism applied to flare conditions,
  'Solar Aurora', is able to reproduce the observations, but implies
  several far-reaching assumptions on the mechanism as well as on the
  environmental parameters. Unavoidable consequences exist with regard to
  the spatial and temporal scales. They are extremely short because of
  the high density of the corona and the need for an energy conversion
  process involving some kind of anomalous resistivity, i.e. extremely
  high electric current densities. A further postulate is that of
  spontaneous propagation of an energy conversion front (ENF), once
  established, in three dimensions. It is assumed that about one half of
  the converted energy appears in form of runaway electrons. Obliqueness
  of the ENFs prevents the existence of a return current problem for the
  emerging runaway electrons. The key flare parameters are formulated
  quantitatively in terms of the environmental properties. Transverse
  length scales turn out to be in the ten centimeter range, time-scales
  in the range of one millisecond. The energy conversion occurs in 10E3
  -10E4 ENFs just above the transition region in a background field of
  the order of 2000 G. Observational consequences are being discussed.

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Title: Dying Flow Bursts as Generators of the Substorm Current Wedge
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2016cosp...41E.783H    Altcode:
  Many theories or conjectures exist on the driver of the substorm current
  wedge, e.g. rerouting of the tail current, current disruption, flow
  braking, vortex formation, and current sheet collapse. Magnitude,
  spatial scale, and temporal development of the related magnetic
  perturbations suggest that the generator is related to the interaction
  of the flow bursts with the dipolar magnetosphere after onset of
  reconnection in the near-Earth tail. The question remains whether it is
  the flow energy that feeds the wedge current or the internal energy of
  the arriving plasma. In this presentation I argue for the latter. The
  current generation is attributed to the force exerted by the dipolarized
  magnetic field of the flow bursts on the preceding layer of high-beta
  plasma after flow braking. The generator current is the grad-B current
  at the outer boundary of the compressed high-beta plasma layers. It
  needs the sequential arrival of several flow bursts to account for
  duration and magnitude of the ionospheric closure current.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Two-Point observations of low-frequency waves at 67P/C-G by
    ROMAP and RPC-MAG
Authors: Heinisch, Philip; Auster, Hans-Ulrich; Richter, Ingo;
   Haerendel, Gerhard; Götz, Charlotte; Apathy, Istvan; Berghofer,
   Gerhard; Fornacon, Karl-Heinz; Glassmeier, Karl-Heinz
2016EGUGA..18.8622H    Altcode:
  During PHILAE's First Science Sequence (FSS) the onboard ROMAP
  magnetometer and the RPC-MAG magnetometer of the ROSETTA orbiter were
  operating simultaneously for about 14h. These measurements provided the
  unique possibility to analyze the spatial and temporal evolution of
  waves in the magnetic field of the comet boundary region. An initial
  analysis revealed, that neither the amplitude nor the direction of
  these waves depend on the day-night cycle at the landing site, but
  rather on the outgassing of the nucleus. Based on a minimum-variance
  analyses two different types of waves could be identified. These mostly
  compressible waves have a propagation direction from the comet tail
  to the front with a velocity between 2km/s and 10km/s.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Refractory Elements from High Resolution Mass Spectra of 67P
    Particles as Found by Rosetta/COSIMA
Authors: Stenzel, O. J.; Hilchenbach, M.; Kissel, J.; Langevin, Y.;
   Briois, C.; Koch, A.; Schulz, R.; Silen, J.; Altobelli, N.; Altwegg,
   K.; Colangeli, L.; Cottin, H.; Baklouti, D.; Bardyn, A.; Engrand,
   C.; Fischer, H.; Fray, N.; Glasmachers, A.; Grün, E.; Haerendel,
   G.; Henkel, H.; Höfner, H.; Hornung, K.; Jessberger, E. K.;
   Lehto, H.; Lehto, K.; Ligier, N.; Lin, Z.; Martin, P.; Merouane, S.;
   Orthous-Daunay, F. R.; Paquette, J.; Raulin, F.; Revillet, C.; Le Roy,
   L.; Rynö, J.; Siljeström, S.; Steiger, W.; Stephan, T.; Thirkell,
   L.; Thomas, R.; Torkar, K.; Varmuza, K.; Wanczek, K. -P.; Zaprudin, B.
2016LPI....47.1934S    Altcode:
  The dust composition analyzer COSIMA collects and analyzes dust
  particles in the coma of comet 67P. We report on the refractory elements
  in these particles.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko: Close-up on Dust Particle
    Fragments
Authors: Hilchenbach, M.; Kissel, J.; Langevin, Y.; Briois, C.;
   von Hoerner, H.; Koch, A.; Schulz, R.; Silén, J.; Altwegg, K.;
   Colangeli, L.; Cottin, H.; Engrand, C.; Fischer, H.; Glasmachers,
   A.; Grün, E.; Haerendel, G.; Henkel, H.; Höfner, H.; Hornung,
   K.; Jessberger, E. K.; Lehto, H.; Lehto, K.; Raulin, F.; Le Roy,
   L.; Rynö, J.; Steiger, W.; Stephan, T.; Thirkell, L.; Thomas, R.;
   Torkar, K.; Varmuza, K.; Wanczek, K. -P.; Altobelli, N.; Baklouti,
   D.; Bardyn, A.; Fray, N.; Krüger, H.; Ligier, N.; Lin, Z.; Martin,
   P.; Merouane, S.; Orthous-Daunay, F. R.; Paquette, J.; Revillet, C.;
   Siljeström, S.; Stenzel, O.; Zaprudin, B.
2016ApJ...816L..32H    Altcode:
  The COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyser instrument on board ESA's
  Rosetta mission has collected dust particles in the coma of comet
  67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. During the early-orbit phase of the Rosetta
  mission, particles and particle agglomerates have been imaged and
  analyzed in the inner coma at distances between 100 km and 10 km off
  the cometary nucleus and at more than 3 AU from the Sun. We identified
  585 particles of more than 14 μm in size. The particles are collected
  at low impact speeds and constitute a sample of the dust particles in
  the inner coma impacting and fragmenting on the targets. The sizes of
  the particles range from 14 μm up to sub-millimeter sizes and the
  differential dust flux size distribution is fitted with a power law
  exponent of -3.1. After impact, the larger particles tend to stick
  together, spread out or consist of single or a group of clumps, and
  the flocculent morphology of the fragmented particles is revealed. The
  elemental composition of the dust particles is heterogeneous and the
  particles could contain typical silicates like olivine and pyroxenes, as
  well as iron sulfides. The sodium to iron elemental ratio is enriched
  with regard to abundances in CI carbonaceous chondrites by a factor
  from ∼1.5 to ∼15. No clear evidence for organic matter has been
  identified. The composition and morphology of the collected dust
  particles appear to be similar to that of interplanetary dust particles.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: COSIMA at Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko After Perihelion
Authors: Paquette, J. A.; Altobelli, N.; Altwegg, K.; Briois,
   C.; Colangeli, L.; Cottin, H.; Baklouti, D.; Bardyn, A.; Engrand,
   C.; Fischer, H.; Fray, N.; Glasmachers, A.; Gruen, E.; Godard, M.;
   Haerendel, G.; Henkel, H.; Hilchenbach, M.; von Hoerner, H.; Höfner,
   H.; Hornung, K.; Jessberger, E.; Kissel, J.; Koch, A.; Lacerda, P.;
   Langevin, Y.; Lehto, H.; Lehto, K.; Le Roy, L.; Ligier, N.; Martin,
   P.; Merouane, S.; Orthous-Daunay, F. R.; Raulin, F.; Revillet, C.;
   Rynö, J.; Schulz, R.; Silen, J. V.; Siljeström, S.; Steiger, W.;
   Stenzel, O.; Stephan, T.; Thirkell, L.; Thomas, R.; Torkar, K.;
   Varmuza, K.; Wanczek, K. P.; Lin, Z. Y.; Zaprudin, B.
2015AGUFM.P31E2089P    Altcode:
  COSIMA (the COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyser) is one of the three
  scientific in-situ dust instruments onboard the Rosetta spacecraft
  [1]. Rosetta has been orbiting comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko since
  August of 2014. COSIMA is collecting cometary dust particles in the
  inner coma by exposing metal targets. It then images the targets
  periodically with COSISCOPE, a microscope/camera, in search of the
  captured particles. A variety of particle morphologies are seen. A
  sample particle is shown in Figure 1. Some of the identified cometary
  particles are further investigated by SIMS (Secondary Ion Mass
  Spectrometry). The high resolution mass spectra show the presence of
  positive or negative ions of elements, organic molecules and molecular
  fragments originating from the selected grain surface. Changes in dust
  characteristics with time will be discussed. [1] Kissel et al. (2007),
  Sp. Sci. Rev. 128, 823-867. [2] Schulz et al. (2015), Nature, 518,
  216-218. Figure 1:A cometary particle collected by COSIMA [2]

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dying Flow Bursts as Generators of the Substorm Current Wedge
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2015AGUFMSM51E2602H    Altcode:
  Many theories or conjectures exist on the driver of the substorm current
  wedge, e.g. rerouting of the tail current, current disruption, flow
  braking, vortex formation, and current sheet collapse. Magnitude,
  spatial scale, and temporal development of the related magnetic
  perturbations suggest that the generator is related to the interaction
  of the flow bursts with the dipolar magnetosphere after onset of
  reconnection in the near-Earth tail. The question remains whether it is
  the flow energy that feeds the wedge current or the internal energy of
  the arriving plasma. In this presentation I argue for the latter. The
  current generation is attributed to the force exerted by the dipolarized
  magnetic field of the flow bursts on the preceding layer of high-beta
  plasma after flow braking. The generator current is the grad-B current
  at the outer boundary of the compressed high-beta plasma layers. It
  needs the sequential arrival of several flow bursts to account for
  duration and magnitude of the ionospheric closure current.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: COSIMA - In-situ dust particles measurements in the inner
    coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Authors: Bardyn, Anais; Hilchenbach, Martin; Briois, Christelle;
   Kissel, Jochen; Koch, Andreas; Langevin, Yves; Schulz, Rita; Silen,
   Johan; Altwegg, Kathrin; Colangeli, Luigi; Cottin, Herve; Engrand,
   Cecile; Fischer, Henning; Glasmachers, Albrecht; Grün, Eberhard;
   Haerendel, Gerhard; Henkel, Hartmut; Höfner, Herwig; Hornung, Klaus;
   Jessberger, Elmar K.; Lehto, Harry; Lehto, Kirsi; Raulin, Francois; Le
   Roy, Lena; Rynö, Jouni; Steiger, Wolfgang; Stephan, Thomas; Thirkell,
   Laurent; Thomas, Roger; Torkar, Klaus; Varmuza, Kurt; Wanczek,
   Karl-Peter; Altobelli, Nicolas; Baklouti, Donia; Fray, Nicolas;
   Lacerda, Pedro; Ligier, Nicolas; Lin, ZhongYi; Martin, Philippe;
   Merouane, Sihane; Orthous-Daunay, François-Régis; Paquette, John;
   Revillet, Claire; Siljeström, Sandra; Stenzel, Oliver; Zaprudin, Boris
2015DPS....4750308B    Altcode:
  COSIMA, the COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyzer, is one of the
  three in-situ dust instruments onboard the Rosetta spacecraft
  [1]. Since August 2014, Rosetta has been escorting the comet
  67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on its journey toward the inner solar
  system.COSIMA is collecting cometary dust particles by exposing metal
  targets in the inner coma, from 10 to hundreds of kilometers off the
  cometary nucleus [2]. Already several thousands of dust particles have
  been collected. The targets are imaged with the microscope COSISCOPE
  and some collected particles are then analyzed by SIMS (Secondary Ion
  Mass Spectrometry). The mass spectra contain positive and negative ions
  revealing components of the grains originating from selected surface
  areas. Dust characteristics will be presented and discussed.[1] Kissel
  et al. (2007), Sp. Sci. Rev. 128, 82-867. [2] Schulz et al. (2015),
  Nature, 518, 216-218.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The nonmagnetic nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Authors: Auster, Hans-Ulrich; Apathy, Istvan; Berghofer, Gerhard;
   Fornacon, Karl-Heinz; Remizov, Anatoli; Carr, Chris; Güttler, Carsten;
   Haerendel, Gerhard; Heinisch, Philip; Hercik, David; Hilchenbach,
   Martin; Kührt, Ekkehard; Magnes, Werner; Motschmann, Uwe; Richter,
   Ingo; Russell, Christopher T.; Przyklenk, Anita; Schwingenschuh,
   Konrad; Sierks, Holger; Glassmeier, Karl-Heinz
2015Sci...349a5102A    Altcode:
  Knowledge of the magnetization of planetary bodies constrains their
  origin and evolution, as well as the conditions in the solar nebular
  at that time. On the basis of magnetic field measurements during the
  descent and subsequent multiple touchdown of the Rosetta lander Philae
  on the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P), we show that no global
  magnetic field was detected within the limitations of analysis. The
  Rosetta Magnetometer and Plasma Monitor (ROMAP) suite of sensors
  measured an upper magnetic field magnitude of less than 2 nanotesla
  at the cometary surface at multiple locations, with the upper specific
  magnetic moment being &lt;3.1 × 10<SUP>-5</SUP> ampere-square meters
  per kilogram for meter-size homogeneous magnetized boulders. The
  maximum dipole moment of 67P is 1.6 × 10<SUP>8</SUP> ampere-square
  meters. We conclude that on the meter scale, magnetic alignment in
  the preplanetary nebula is of minor importance.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flow bursts, breakup arc, and substorm current wedge
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2015JGRA..120.2796H    Altcode:
  Energy liberated by the reconnection process in the near-Earth tail is
  transported via flow bursts toward the dipolar magnetosphere during
  substorms. The breakup arc is a manifestation of the arrival of
  the bursts under flow braking and energy deposition. Its structure
  and behavior is analyzed on the basis of five striking spatial,
  temporal, and energetic properties, qualitatively and in part also
  quantitatively. A key element is the formation of stop layers. They are
  thin layers, of the width of an ion gyro radius, in which the magnetic
  field makes a transition from tail to near-dipolar magnetosphere
  configurations and in which the kinetic energy of fast flows is
  converted into electromagnetic energy of kinetic Alfvén waves. The
  flows arise from the relaxation of the strong magnetic shear stresses in
  the leading part of the flow bursts. The bright narrow arcs of less than
  10 km width inside the broad poleward expanding breakup arc, Alfvénic
  in nature and visually characterized by erratic short-lived rays, are
  seen as traces of the stop layers. The gaps between two narrow and
  highly structured arcs are filled with more diffuse emissions. They
  are attributed to the relaxation of the less strained magnetic field
  of the flow bursts. Eastward flows along the arcs are linked to the
  shrinking gaps between two successive arcs and the entry of auroral
  streamers into the dipolar magnetosphere in the midnight sector. Flow
  braking in the stop layers forms multiple pairs of narrow balanced
  currents and cannot be behind the formation of the substorm current
  wedge. Instead, its origin is attributed to the force exerted by the
  dipolarized magnetic field of the flow bursts on the high-beta plasma,
  after the high magnetic shears have relaxed and the fast flows and stop
  layer process have subsided, in other words, to the "dying flow bursts."

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Substorm onset: Current sheet avalanche and stop layer
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2015JGRA..120.1697H    Altcode:
  A new scenario is presented for the onset of a substorm and the
  nature of the breakup arc. There are two main components, current
  sheet avalanche and stop layer. The first refers to an earthward
  flow of plasma and magnetic flux from the central current sheet of
  the tail, triggered spontaneously or by some unknown interaction with
  an auroral streamer or a suddenly appearing eastward flow at the end
  of the growth phase. The second offers a mechanism to stop the flow
  abruptly at the interface between magnetosphere and tail and extract
  momentum and energy to be partially processed locally and partially
  transmitted as Poynting flux toward the ionosphere. The stop layer
  has a width of the order of the ion inertial length. The different
  dynamics of the ions entering freely and the magnetized electrons
  create an electric polarization field which stops the ion flow and
  drives a Hall current by which flow momentum is transferred to the
  magnetic field. A simple formalism is used to describe the operation
  of the process and to enable quantitative conclusions. An important
  conclusion is that by necessity the stop layer is also highly structured
  in longitude. This offers a natural explanation for the coarse ray
  structure of the breakup arc as manifestation of elementary paths of
  energy and momentum transport. The currents aligned with the rays are
  balanced between upward and downward directions. While the avalanche
  is invoked for explaining the spontaneous substorm onset at the inner
  edge of the tail, the expansion of the breakup arc for many minutes
  is taken as evidence for a continued formation of new stop layers
  by arrival of flow bursts from the near-Earth neutral line. This
  is in line with earlier conclusions about the nature of the breakup
  arc. Small-scale structure, propagation speed, and energy flux are
  quantitatively consistent with observations. However, the balanced
  small-scale currents cannot constitute the substorm current wedge. The
  source of the latter must be located just earthward of the stop layer in
  the near-dipolar magnetosphere and be powered by the internal energy of
  the flow bursts. The stop layer mechanism is in some way the inverse
  of reconnection, as it converts flow into electromagnetic energy,
  and may have wide applicability in astrophysical plasmas.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: In-Situ Cometary Particle Measurements in the Inner Coma of
    Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Authors: Hilchenbach, M.; Langevin, Y.; Engrand, C.; Merouane, S.;
   Stenzel, O.; Kissel, J.; Briois, Ch.; Koch, A.; Schulz, R.; Silen,
   J.; Altwegg, K.; Colangeli, L.; Cottin, H.; Fischer, H.; Glasmachers,
   A.; Grün, E.; Haerendel, G.; Henkel, H.; Höfner, H.; Hornung, K.;
   Jessberger, E. K.; Lehto, H.; Lehto, K.; Raulin, F.; Le Roy, L.; Rynö,
   J.; Steiger, W.; Stephan, T.; Thirkell, L.; Thomas, R.; Torkar, K.;
   Varmuza, K.; Wanczek, K. P.; Altobelli, N.; Baklouti, D.; Bardyn,
   A.; Fray, N.; Godard, M.; Martin, P.; Lacerda, P.; Ligier, N.; Lin,
   Z.; Orthous-Daunay, F. R.; Paquette, J.; Revillet, C.; Siljeström,
   S.; Zaprudin, B.
2015LPI....46.1936H    Altcode: 2015LPICo1832.1936H
  Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko has a dusty inner coma and particle
  morphology assembles agglomerates.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Substorms
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2015GMS...207..307H    Altcode:
  This chapter deals with the essence of the magnetospheric substorm,
  the return of magnetic flux into the magnetosphere after disconnection
  from the solar wind magnetic field. There are three fundamental
  transport processes involved: (1) thinning of the tail plasma sheet
  and accompanying recession of the outer boundary of the dipolar
  magnetosphere during the growth phase, (2) flux transport along
  the tail toward that boundary after onset of tail reconnection,
  and (3) penetration of plasma and magnetic flux into the dipolar
  magnetosphere. The chapter then looks at corresponding processes in
  the Jupiter and Saturn magnetospheres and tails, which are strongly
  dominated by the fast planetary rotations. It elucidates some key
  aspects of the entry problem, albeit from a personal vantage point,
  and addresses the still open questions. Finally, the chapter addresses
  the correlation between solar wind ram pressure and auroral activity
  and brightness on Jupiter and Saturn.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First Results of Plasma And Magnetic Field Measurements
    Onboard The Rosetta Lander Philae at The Surface of Comet
    67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Authors: Auster, H. U.; Apathy, I. N.; Remizov, A.; Berghofer, G.;
   Hilchenbach, M.; Haerendel, G.; Heinisch, P.; Richter, I.; Glassmeier,
   K. H.
2014AGUFM.P34B..02A    Altcode:
  The ROMAP (Rosetta Lander Magnetometer and Plasma Monitor) suite of
  sensors onboard the Rosetta lander Philae consists of a fluxgate
  magnetometer and plasma ion and electron sensors. ROMAP will
  measure for the first time the magnetic field as well as electron
  and ion distributions on a cometary surface.
 First magnetic field
  measurements during the Philae descent and plasma investigations during
  the first science sequence on the cometary surfce will be presented
  together with concurrent magnetic field measurements of the Rosetta
  orbiter. Furthermore, we shall discuss the measurement operation
  strategy for the long term sequence, for observing the evolution of
  the plasma environment by measurements with both plasma packages,
  ROMAP on the surface and RPC onboard the Rosetta Orbiter.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Cosima - Cometary Dust Analysis Next to Comet
    67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Authors: Hilchenbach, M.; Kissel, J.; Briois, C.; Henkel, H.; Langevin,
   Y.; Schulz, R.; Silen, J. V.; Altwegg, K.; Colangeli, L.; Cottin, H.;
   Engrand, C.; Glasmachers, A.; Grün, E.; Haerendel, G.; Höfner, H.;
   Hornung, K.; Jessberger, E.; Koch, A.; Lehto, H.; Lehto, K.; Raulin,
   F.; Le Roy, L.; Rynö, J.; Steiger, W.; Stephan, T.; Thirkell, L.;
   Thomas, R.; Torkar, K.; Varmuza, K.; Wanczek, K. P.
2014AGUFM.P32B..04H    Altcode:
  After a long journey through the inner solar system, ESA's corner stone
  mission ROSETTA has arrived at comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. COSIMA
  or the COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyzer onboard ROSETTA is a
  secondary ion mass spectrometer focussing on in-situ measurements of
  the composition of cometary grains collected next to the nucleus and
  inner coma. High resolution mass spectra will contain complex mixtures
  of mineral and organic elements and molecules as well as molecular
  fragments representing the elements and molecules on the surface of
  the cometary grains. We will report on first results of the in-situ
  analysis of cometary grains as captured, imaged and analysed by COSIMA .

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: COSIMA - Cometary Dust Analysis in the inner coma of Comet
    67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Authors: Hilchenbach, Martin; Kissel, Jochen; Briois, Christelle;
   von Hoerner, Hanna; Langevin , Yves; Schulz, Rita; Silen, Johan;
   Altwegg, Kathrin; Colangeli, Luigi; Cottin, Herve; Engrand, Cecile;
   Glasmachers, Albrecht; Gruen, Eberhard; Haerendel, Gerhard; Henkel,
   Hartmut; Höfner, Herwig; Hornung, Klaus; Jessberger, Elmar; Koch,
   Andreas; Letho, Harry; Letho, Kirsi; Raulin, Francois; Le Roy, Lena;
   Rynö, Jouni; Steiger , Wolfgang; Stephan , Thomas; Laurent, Thirkell;
   Thomas, Roger.; Torkar, Klaus; Varmuza, Kurt; Wanczek, Klaus Peter
2014DPS....4620903H    Altcode:
  After a long journey through the inner solar system,
  ESA’s corner stone mission ROSETTA has arrived at comet
  67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. COSIMA or the COmetary Secondary Ion Mass
  Analyzer onboard ROSETTA is a secondary ion mass spectrometer focussing
  on in-situ measurements of the composition of cometary grains collected
  near the nucleus and inner coma. High resolution mass spectra will
  contain ions of complex mixtures of mineral compounds and organic
  molecules as well as molecular fragments representing the elements
  and molecules on the surface of the cometary grains. We will report on
  our envisaged in-situ analysis goals of cometary grains as captured,
  imaged and analysed by COSIMA.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Role and origin of the poleward Alfvénic arc
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Frey, H. U.
2014JGRA..119.2945H    Altcode:
  Alfvénic arcs are often found adjacent to the poleward border of the
  substorm bulge. They are created by precipitating narrow electron beams
  with a broad energy distribution, mainly below 1 keV, and dominated
  by Alfvénic structures of small scales and frequencies in the 1 Hz
  range. They are also associated with transverse ion heating. A balanced
  field-aligned current system accompanying the poleward Alfvénic arc
  reveals its underlying structure being a broad channel of primary
  energy inflow of several tens of kilometers width. The associated
  magnetic shear stresses drive a flow along the poleward side of
  the substorm current wedge. Polar cap convection passes through
  this channel before entering the substorm bulge. The small-scale
  electromagnetic structures are developing from the primary energy
  inflow by scale breaking and multiple reflections in the ionospheric
  Alfvén resonator. By their parallel electric field components these
  structures decouple effectively from the ionosphere. Their energy
  content is converted into kinetic energy of auroral particles in the
  topside ionosphere. A selected data set from FAST, DE 2, and Cluster
  is presented for characterizing the energetic and electromagnetic
  properties of the Alfvénic arc. Its function in the substorm can be
  summarized as a preconditioning of the polar cap plasma and magnetic
  field for entry into the magnetosphere through the poleward arc. This
  occurs under substantial density depletion.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: M-I coupling scales and energy dumping
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2014GeoRL..41.1846H    Altcode:
  The paper reviews three magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling scales
  characterizing (1) inverted-V auroral arcs, (2) so-called Alfvénic
  arcs, and (3) dense plasma clouds artificially injected into the
  magnetosphere. The three scale-breaking processes are different but
  follow all from the principle of perfect matching of the wave impedance
  of the energy and momentum carrier with the effective resistance of the
  energy dump. As a consequence, wave reflections from the ionosphere
  are absent or present only in a short initial phase and lead to
  quasi-stationary wave fields. In inverted-V auroral arcs the energy
  conversion occurs in the low magnetosphere by postacceleration of the
  current-carrying hot electrons. For the Alfvénic arc the energy is
  transferred first to dispersive Alfvén waves which are then damped
  in the topside ionosphere by accelerating electrons along B and ions
  transversely to B. Barium plasma clouds break into narrow striations
  mapping to ionospheric scales that experience a strongly reduced
  Pedersen conductivity and thus achieve the perfect matching. It is also
  argued that the scale √(ΣP/K), derived from electrostatic mapping,
  is not suited to describe M-I coupling.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma Entry from Tail into the Dipolar Magnetosphere During
    Substorms
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2014cosp...40E1130H    Altcode:
  Plasma entering the dipolar magnetosphere from the tail has to overcome
  the obstacle presented by the conductivity enhancements caused by the
  poleward arc(s). While the arcs move poleward, the plasma proceeds
  equatorward as testified by the existence of a westward electric
  field. The arcs break into smaller-scale structures and loops with a
  tendency of eastward growth and expansion, although the basic driving
  force is directed earthward/equatorward. The likely reason is that the
  arc-related conductivity enhancements act as flow barriers and convert
  normal into shear stresses. The energy derived from the release of the
  shear stresses and dissipated in the arcs lowers the entropy content of
  the flux tubes and enables their earthward progression. In addition,
  poleward jumps of the breakup arcs are quite common. They result from
  refreshments of the generator plasma by the sequential arrival of flow
  bursts from the near-Earth neutral line. Once inside the oval, the
  plasma continues to move equatorward as manifested through north-south
  aligned auroral forms. Owing to the existence of an inner border of
  the oval, marked by the Region 2 currents, all flows are eventually
  diverted sunward.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dayside auroral hiss observed at South Pole Station
Authors: Yan, X.; Labelle, J.; Haerendel, G.; Spasojevic, M.; Bunch,
   N.; Golden, D. I.; Frey, H. U.; Weatherwax, A. T.
2013JGRA..118.1220Y    Altcode:
  We performed a statistical study of low frequency (LF) auroral hiss
  recorded at South Pole Station in 2004, 2005, and 2007, and very
  low frequency (VLF) hiss recorded in 2000-2008. As expected, most
  auroral hiss occurs in the pre-midnight sector. However, there is a
  secondary peak in occurrence in the pre-noon sector (1000-1530 UT;
  ∼ 0630-1200 magnetic local time (MLT)) and somewhat more events
  occur in the post-noon sector (1530-2100 UT; ∼ 1200-1730 MLT),
  with a null in occurrence around noon MLT. Individual dayside events
  appear similar to nightside hiss, but statistically they do not extend
  to as high frequencies. Solar wind discontinuities or impulses on the
  magnetopause are not correlated with these events. All-sky camera,
  photometer, magnetometer, riometer, and VLF receiver data show that
  dayside LF hiss almost always extends to the VLF range and is often
  associated with active aurora. Examination of interplanetary magnetic
  field (IMF), substorm conditions, and Kp/AE/QI indices at times of
  dayside hiss suggests differences between the pre-noon and post-noon
  events: pre-noon events are associated with IMF B<SUB>y</SUB> &lt;
  0, whereas post-noon events favor B<SUB>z</SUB> &lt; 0 and show a
  weaker correlation with B<SUB>y</SUB> &gt; 0. The correlation between
  pre-noon events and B<SUB>y</SUB> &lt; 0 may arise because under
  those conditions, the pattern of field-aligned currents (FACs) shifts
  to later magnetic local times, causing upward FACs to be dominant
  during pre-noon hours at 74°, the invariant latitude of the South
  Pole. Unlike pre-noon events, post-noon events are more often associated
  with substorm activity on the nightside and favor elevated Kp indices,
  suggesting a connection of post-noon events to nightside activity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ionospheric Control of the Distribution of Magnetospheric
    Reconnection and Convection
Authors: Zhang, B.; Smith, R. H.; Brambles, O.; Lotko, W.; Ouellette,
   J.; Lyon, J.; Haerendel, G.
2012AGUFMSM22A..05Z    Altcode:
  Observations reveal that for southward interplanetary magnetic field
  conditions the two-cell convection pattern in Earth's ionosphere rotates
  clockwise relative to the sun-earth line (when viewed from above the
  pole) with more magnetic flux circulating in the dusk convection cell
  than in the dawn cell. For the same interplanetary conditions, the
  nightside magnetosphere exhibits enhanced magnetic reconnection along
  the premidnight x-line with fast exhaust flows developing in channels in
  the premidnight plasmasheet. These asymmetries have been investigated
  extensively in isolation and essentially as independent phenomena. It
  is shown here for the first time that they are actually different
  manifestations of the same coupled process. Global simulations of the
  magnetosphere-ionosphere interaction and simple physical considerations
  show that the observed asymmetries are a consequence of meridional
  gradients in the ionospheric Hall conductance. Causal relationships
  are demonstrated through a series of controlled numerical experiments
  which would be practically impossible to tease-out observationally.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Birth and life of auroral arcs embedded in the evening auroral
oval convection: A critical comparison of observations with theory
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Frey, H. U.; Chaston, C. C.; Amm, O.; Juusola,
   L.; Nakamura, R.; Seran, E.; Weygand, J. M.
2012JGRA..11712220H    Altcode:
  We present and analyze data on auroral arcs obtained during a pass
  of the FAST satellite over the field-of-view of the all-sky camera
  at Ft. Simpson (Canada), supported by ground-based magnetometer and
  SuperDARN radar data, and plasma data from THEMIS-A near the source
  region of the auroral currents. The auroral event took place at 19:00
  MLT during substorm activity further east. Active auroral arcs were
  present over six degrees in latitude moving equatorward with significant
  changes in brightness and structure. New arcs were forming continuously
  at the polar border of the auroral oval which was marked by an Alfvénic
  arc. The data analysis revealed that the equatorward drift of the
  arcs was in part due to convective motion of the plasma frame but was
  rather dominated by proper motions of the arcs. Interpretation of these
  findings in the framework of theoretical work by one of the authors
  reproduces quantitatively the observed proper motion as a consequence
  of the progressive erosion of magnetic shear stresses. Most important
  was the possibility to deduce the interaction time scale between arc
  and source region. On average it corresponded to about six to eight
  transit times of an Alfvén wave between arc and source plasma or two
  fundamental eigenperiods of toroidal mode or azimuthally polarized
  Alfvén waves. However, large variations of the interaction times
  and corresponding proper motions were found. They are attributed to
  temporal and spatial variations of the energy input from the source
  plasma. The more remarkable is the fact that analysis on the basis of
  a quasi-stationary model produces consistent results. The progressive
  release of shear stresses during the equatorward motion of the arcs
  leads to the conclusion that they are dying after having reached the
  maximum of the poleward Pedersen current.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling and scale breaking of a
    plasma cloud in the magnetosphere
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard; Mende, Stephen B.
2012JGRA..117.9233H    Altcode: 2012JGRA..11709233H
  The goal of this paper is to deliver a long-missing interpretation
  of a central issue of the NASA-MPE barium injection experiment
  performed in September 1971. It pertains to the interaction with the
  ionosphere. Observations of the cloud's motion revealed no obvious sign
  of such interaction. The barium vapor was released from a Scout rocket
  at an altitude of 31,000 km above South America during late evening
  hours and was observed for more than 4000 s. The barium plasma split
  into several field-parallel streaks which moved for a long time as if
  subject to constant acceleration as viewed from the inertial frame
  of the rocket at release. This means that no reflection of energy
  due to a mismatch of ionospheric conductivity and the characteristic
  impedance of an impinging Alfvén wave was observed. It is this finding
  that has never been properly interpreted. Furthermore, after a careful
  assessment of the barium cloud properties and environmental parameters,
  we find a theoretical coupling time to the ambient flow which turns
  out to be substantially longer than observed. Although this appears to
  indicate that some interaction with the ionosphere occurred, we can
  rule out multiple wave reflections during the observed acceleration
  phase. Discarding other possibilities, we interpret the observed motions
  as sign of perfect matching of the momentum and energy flux into the
  ionosphere with the rate of dissipation. This is achieved during the
  initial phase by scale breaking of the cloud into streaks with narrow
  widths which allow parallel potential drops along the Alfvén wings
  because of the waves' inertial nature and inside the lower ionosphere
  owing to the finite parallel resistivity, thereby greatly reducing
  the effective Pedersen conductivity. The significance of this finding
  goes beyond understanding the barium injection experiment. It sheds
  light on how magnetospheric plasma irregularities can share momentum
  and energy with the ionosphere in an optimized fashion.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A tool for characterizing and evaluating Type II auroral arcs
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2012JGRA..117.6214H    Altcode: 2012JGRA..11706214H
  The paper is intended as a tool for describing or analyzing auroral arcs
  embedded in a Type II current system. The physics has been extensively
  described by analytical models in recent papers of the author. Here
  it is only briefly summarized to the extent needed to explain the set
  of relations describing the gross properties of embedded arcs. The
  equations are fully consistent with those derived in the earlier
  papers, but more general. A new element is the consideration of what
  determines the width of an auroral arc. Two solutions are presented
  depending on the relative contributions of the auroral acceleration
  process and ionospheric dissipation to the total energy conversion
  rate. It is argued that nature chooses the solution of optimum energy
  conversion. The equations are best suited to describe structured arcs
  in the evening auroral oval with inverted-V particle signature, even
  when they appear more dynamic than a quasi-static approach seems to
  allow. In spite of the inherent idealizations, the presented relations
  may prove to be useful for analyzing data from satellite transits
  through auroral current sheets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar Auroras
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2012ApJ...749..166H    Altcode:
  This paper deals with the acceleration of high-energy flare electrons
  by field-parallel electric fields in an approach tailored after the
  auroral acceleration process. Electromagnetic energy, derived from
  the release of magnetic shear stresses, is converted into kinetic
  energy of particles. The stress release is enabled by field-aligned
  potential drops generated by anomalous resistivity of highly filamentary
  currents. The high-energy flare electrons are identified with runaway
  particles of this process. The magnetic shear stresses originate
  from Alfvén waves emitted from high-beta loop-top plasma which is
  produced by braking of the outflow from a reconnection site higher
  up in the corona. Partial reflection of the waves at the interface
  to the chromosphere leads to evaporation of chromospheric plasma and
  creation of a strongly filamentary structure in the sheared coronal
  field. The energy conversion process propagates spontaneously, like an
  erosion process in three dimensions. The overall stress release site
  forms a thin triangular sheet growing along and perpendicular to the
  field. After about one second, its cross-section perpendicular to B has
  grown to tens of square kilometers. This spontaneous growth strongly
  alleviates the demands on the primary filamentary structure posed by
  the condition of current criticality. Energy flux and mean energy are
  of the magnitude typical for hard X-rays producing electrons. Their
  strong dependence on the ambient magnetic field in combination with
  the fast propagation of the energy conversion sites could lead to
  energy-dependent time delays of a few 100 ms, much longer than the
  time-of-flight effects of the electrons.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Alfvén: magnetosphere—ionosphere connection explorers
Authors: Berthomier, M.; Fazakerley, A. N.; Forsyth, C.; Pottelette,
   R.; Alexandrova, O.; Anastasiadis, A.; Aruliah, A.; Blelly, P. -L.;
   Briand, C.; Bruno, R.; Canu, P.; Cecconi, B.; Chust, T.; Daglis,
   I.; Davies, J.; Dunlop, M.; Fontaine, D.; Génot, V.; Gustavsson,
   B.; Haerendel, G.; Hamrin, M.; Hapgood, M.; Hess, S.; Kataria, D.;
   Kauristie, K.; Kemble, S.; Khotyaintsev, Y.; Koskinen, H.; Lamy, L.;
   Lanchester, B.; Louarn, P.; Lucek, E.; Lundin, R.; Maksimovic, M.;
   Manninen, J.; Marchaudon, A.; Marghitu, O.; Marklund, G.; Milan, S.;
   Moen, J.; Mottez, F.; Nilsson, H.; Ostgaard, N.; Owen, C. J.; Parrot,
   M.; Pedersen, A.; Perry, C.; Pinçon, J. -L.; Pitout, F.; Pulkkinen,
   T.; Rae, I. J.; Rezeau, L.; Roux, A.; Sandahl, I.; Sandberg, I.;
   Turunen, E.; Vogt, J.; Walsh, A.; Watt, C. E. J.; Wild, J. A.;
   Yamauchi, M.; Zarka, P.; Zouganelis, I.
2012ExA....33..445B    Altcode: 2011ExA...tmp...35V; 2011ExA...tmp..160B; 2011ExA...tmp..136B
  The aurorae are dynamic, luminous displays that grace the night skies
  of Earth's high latitude regions. The solar wind emanating from
  the Sun is their ultimate energy source, but the chain of plasma
  physical processes leading to auroral displays is complex. The
  special conditions at the interface between the solar wind-driven
  magnetosphere and the ionospheric environment at the top of Earth's
  atmosphere play a central role. In this Auroral Acceleration Region
  (AAR) persistent electric fields directed along the magnetic field
  accelerate magnetospheric electrons to the high energies needed
  to excite luminosity when they hit the atmosphere. The "ideal
  magnetohydrodynamics" description of space plasmas which is useful in
  much of the magnetosphere cannot be used to understand the AAR. The
  AAR has been studied by a small number of single spacecraft missions
  which revealed an environment rich in wave-particle interactions,
  plasma turbulence, and nonlinear acceleration processes, acting on a
  variety of spatio-temporal scales. The pioneering 4-spacecraft Cluster
  magnetospheric research mission is now fortuitously visiting the AAR,
  but its particle instruments are too slow to allow resolve many of
  the key plasma physics phenomena. The Alfvén concept is designed
  specifically to take the next step in studying the aurora, by making
  the crucial high-time resolution, multi-scale measurements in the
  AAR, needed to address the key science questions of auroral plasma
  physics. The new knowledge that the mission will produce will find
  application in studies of the Sun, the processes that accelerate the
  solar wind and that produce aurora on other planets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Birth and Life of Auroral Arcs Embedded in the Evening
    Auroral Oval
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Chaston, C. C.; Frey, H. U.; Amm, O.; Juusola,
   L.; Nakamura, R.; Seran, E.; Weygand, J. M.
2011AGUFMSM31A2072H    Altcode:
  We report on all-sky camera observations at Ft. Simpson during the
  crossing of the FAST spacecraft on 09 March 2008 at about 19:00
  MLT. FAST registered eight auroral arcs with the associated upward
  currents and two periods of downward currents during the crossing
  time of five minutes. All arcs were moving equatorward with speeds
  near 300 m/s. Some of them exhibited local broadening and subsequent
  unfolding. Most remarkable was the appearance of new arcs at the
  poleward border of the auroral oval, clearly marked by an Alfvénic
  arc. The FAST data on energy and energy flux of the precipitating
  electrons and the jumps of the transverse magnetic perturbation field
  through the arcs were evaluated for five of the arcs following the
  formalism of Haerendel [2007]. This led to very consistent values for
  the integral wave impedance, field-parallel conductance, Alfvénic
  transit time, arc width, proper motion, and total energy release
  including the ionospheric dissipation. The most significant result
  is that all equatorward motions of the arcs were consistent with
  being proper motions in the rest frame of the ambient plasma. This
  is observational evidence for the arcs feeding on the magnetic energy
  liberated by the release of shear stresses in a region of dominantly
  upward field-aligned currents.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electromagnetic power flows in MI coupling: origins, spatial
    scales, and conversion processes
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2011AGUFMSM41C..01H    Altcode:
  There are four dominant sources of e.m. energy flow from the outer
  realms of the magnetosphere into the ionosphere, (1) dragging of open
  flux tubes by the solar wind, (2) braking of earthward reconnection
  flows in the tail, (3) earthward directed forces of hot plasma
  piling up at the inner edge of the tail during substorms, and (4)
  pressure forces driving the sunward convection along the auroral
  oval. The fraction of the energy flux arriving immediately at the
  ionosphere varies strongly among these four mechanisms. In (1) most
  of the energy first flows into the plasma sheet, while in process
  (4) most of the energy flows directly into the ionosphere, or a
  fraction of it indirectly via auroral particle production. There are
  no intrinsic scales for the direct flow of energy into the ionosphere
  and dissipation by ion-neutral collisions, but where energy is first
  processed by energization of auroral particles, various transverse
  scales appear. They are owed to the matching of Alfvén wave impedance
  and field-parallel or ionospheric conductances, or to the dissipative
  properties of kinetic Alfvén waves. In all cases, the dumping of the
  energy flow involves the release of shear magnetic stresses.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Six auroral generators: A review
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2011JGRA..116.0K05H    Altcode:
  The paper reviews generator processes and configurations of six types
  of auroral arcs: embedded arcs, Alfvénic arcs, onset arcs, poleward
  arcs during substorms, auroral streamers, and auroral spirals. The
  arcs and generators are elements in global current systems, which are
  classified as Types I and II after Boström. The arcs may be dominated
  by transient processes or be quasi-stationary. The main emphasis of the
  paper is on the generator forces. They are pressure gradient forces,
  magnetic normal or shear stresses, or inertial forces. For three cases,
  the arcs embedded in the oval convection, the poleward arc during
  substorms, and the auroral streamers, simple expressions are presented
  of the currents injected into the ionosphere by the generator process,
  allowing quantitative evaluations. The relations leading from these
  currents to other key auroral quantities are summarized. The apparent
  conflict between the widths of Alfvénic arcs and the transverse scales
  required for energy coupling to the topside ionospheric plasma is solved
  by assuming current and field filamentation by multiple reflections in
  the ionospheric Alfvén resonator. The substorm generator is described
  as a high-beta plasma layer arising from collapse of the tail current
  sheet. An essential element in this process is the shedding of excess
  flux tube entropy through energy dumping in the auroral acceleration
  process and ionospheric dissipation. The dynamics of this process
  needs further investigation. The physics of the connection between flow
  bursts in the tail plasma sheet and the flows associated with auroral
  streamers in the ionosphere is discussed. Regular auroral spirals and
  the westward traveling surge have in common a concentration of upward
  field-aligned current which demands strongly enhanced dissipation. They
  differ by the processes creating the upward current concentration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic fractures or reconnection of type II
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2011IAUS..274...56H    Altcode:
  The importance of reconnection in astrophysics has been widely
  recognized. It is instrumental in storing and releasing magnetic energy,
  the latter often in a dramatic fashion. A closely related process,
  playing in very low beta plasmas, is much less known. It is behind the
  acceleration of auroral particles in the low-density environment several
  1000 km above the Earth. It involves the appearance of field-parallel
  voltages in presence of intense field-aligned currents. The underlying
  physical process is the release of magnetic shear stresses and
  conversion of the liberated magnetic energy into kinetic energy of
  the particles creating auroral arcs. In this process, field lines
  disconnect from the field anchored in the ionosphere and reconnect
  to other field lines. Because of the stiffness of the magnetic field,
  the process resembles mechanical fractures. It is typically active in
  the low-density magnetosphere of planets. However, it can also lead
  to significant energy conversion with high-energy particle production
  and subsequent gamma ray emissions in stellar magnetic fields, in
  particular of compact objects.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Droplet Model of Quiescent Prominence Downflows
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Berger, T.
2011ApJ...731...82H    Altcode:
  Observations of quiescent prominences with the Solar Optical
  Telescope on the Hinode satellite have revealed the ubiquitous
  existence of downflows forming coherent thin and highly structured
  vertically oriented threads with velocities between 10 and 20 km
  s<SUP>-1</SUP>. Their widths range between 300 and 500 km. They are
  often initiated at the top of the visible prominence, but sometimes also
  at intermediate level. We propose that the downflows are made of plasma
  packets that squeeze themselves through the dominantly horizontal field
  under the action of gravity. Their origin is assumed to be hot plasma
  supplied from either inside or the immediate vicinity of the prominence
  and condensing at its top. Under compression and further cooling,
  the matter overflows to the flanks of the prominence dragging its
  magnetic field with it. Under the increasing action of gravity, vertical
  structures are forming which eventually disconnect from the field of
  the inflow channel thus forming finite plasma packets. This process is
  reminiscent of water flowing over a mountain ridge and breaking up into
  a multitude of droplets. Like water droplets being subject to air drag,
  the falling plasma droplets experience a drag force by the horizontal
  prominence field and assume a steady vertical velocity. This happens via
  the excitation of Alfvén waves. Lateral confinement by the prominence
  field determines their spatial extent. The small scales of the droplets
  and the directional balance of their internal tangled magnetic fields
  can explain the absence of appreciable vertical components in magnetic
  field measurements. On the basis of the observed width and vertical
  speed of the downflows and by adopting a prominence field of about 8 G,
  we derive central density and temperature of the droplets, which turn
  out to be quite consistent with known prominence characteristics. In
  the formulation of the drag force a dimensionless "magnetic drag
  coefficient" has been introduced with a value well below unity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Small and meso-scale properties of a substorm onset auroral arc
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Amm, O.; Chaston, C. C.; Fu, S.; Haerendel, G.;
   Juusola, L.; Karlsson, T.; Lanchester, B.; Nakamura, R.; Østgaard,
   N.; Sakanoi, T.; Séran, E.; Whiter, D.; Weygand, J.; Asamura, K.;
   Hirahara, M.
2010JGRA..11510209F    Altcode:
  We present small and meso-scale properties of a substorm onset arc
  observed simultaneously by the Reimei and THEMIS satellites together
  with ground-based observations by the THEMIS GBO system. The optical
  observations revealed the slow equatorward motion of the growth-phase
  arc and the development of a much brighter onset arc poleward of
  it. Both arcs showed the typical particle signature of electrostatic
  acceleration in an inverted-V structure together with a strong Alfvén
  wave acceleration signature at the poleward edge of the onset arc. Two
  THEMIS spacecraft encountered earthward flow bursts around the times
  the expanding optical aurora reached their magnetic footprints in
  the ionosphere. The particle and field measurements allowed for the
  reconstruction of the field-aligned current system and the determination
  of plasma properties in the auroral source region. Auroral arc
  properties were extracted from the optical and particle measurements and
  were used to compare measured values to theoretical predictions of the
  electrodynamic model for the generation of auroral arcs. Good agreement
  could be reached for the meso-scale arc properties. A qualitative
  analysis of the internal structuring of the bright onset arc suggests
  the operation of the tearing instability which provides a 'rope-like'
  appearance due to advection of the current in the sheared flow across
  the arc. We also note that for the observed parameters ionospheric
  conductivity gradients due to electron precipitation will be unstable
  to the feedback instability in the ionospheric Alfvén resonator that
  can drive structuring in luminosity over the range of scales observed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Equatorward moving arcs and substorm onset
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2010JGRA..115.7212H    Altcode: 2010JGRA..11507212H
  Key observations of phenomena during the growth phase of a substorm
  are being reviewed with particular attention to the equatorward motion
  of the hydrogen and electron arcs. The dynamic role of the electron,
  the so-called growth phase arc, is analyzed. It is part of a current
  system of type II that is instrumental in changing the dominantly
  equatorward convection from the polar cap into a sunward convection
  along the auroral oval. A quantitative model of the arc and associated
  current system allows determining the energy required for the flow
  change. It is suggested that high-β plasma outflow from the central
  current sheet of the tail creates the current generator. Assessment of
  the energy supplied in this process proves its sufficiency for driving
  the arc system. The equatorward motion of the arcs is interpreted as
  a manifestation of the shrinkage of the near-Earth transition region
  (NETR) between the dipolar magnetosphere and the highly stretched
  tail. This shrinkage is caused by returning magnetic flux to the
  dayside magnetosphere as partial replacement of the flux eroded by
  frontside reconnection. As the erosion of the NETR is proceeding,
  more and more magnetic flux is demanded from the central current sheet
  of the near-Earth tail until highly accelerated plasma outflow causes
  the current sheet to collapse. Propagation of the collapse along the
  tail triggers reconnection and initiates the substorm.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Fascinating Plasma Structures (Jean Dominique Cassini Medal
    Lecture)
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2010EGUGA..12.2123H    Altcode:
  In this lecture I will discuss three plasma realms, which have attracted
  my particular attention because of their fascinating observable fine
  structure and the complex underlying physics. The structure is, of
  course, owed to the pervading magnetic field. But it is in particular
  the role of magnetic tensions that will be highlighted. The three
  plasma phenomena are: (1) cometary plasma tails, where magnetic tensions
  transfer momentum from the solar wind under mass loading by the comet;
  (2) auroral arcs, which owe their energy influx to the release of
  magnetic shear stresses; and (3) solar prominences, in which cool
  plasma embedded in the hot corona is subject to a balance of magnetic
  shear stresses and gravity. The last subject is a recent topic of
  my research and still bears many secrets. Images and movies will be
  supplemented by brief characterizations of the key physical processes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric evaporation via Alfvén waves .
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2010MmSAI..81..653H    Altcode:
  We summarize a scenario for the chromospheric evaporation during solar
  flares. For details we refer to \citet{haerendel2009}.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A droplet model for downflows in hedgerow prominences
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard; Berger, Thomas
2010cosp...38.2915H    Altcode: 2010cosp.meet.2915H
  Observations of hedgerow prominences with the Solar Optical Telescope of
  the Hinode mission have revealed the ubiquitous existence of downflows
  forming coherent thin and highly structured near-vertical threads
  with velocities between 10 and 20 km/s. Their widths range between
  300 and 500 km. They are often initiated at the top of the visible
  prominence, but sometimes also at intermediate level. We propose that
  the downflows are made of plasma packets that squeeze themselves through
  the dominantly horizontal field under the action of gravity. Their
  origin is assumed to be hot plasma either supplied from outside along
  the arcade field overarching the prominence and condensing at its top,
  or along the spine field of the prominence itself. Under compression
  and further cooling, the matter sinks into the prominence dragging
  its magnetic field with it, but eventually disconnecting it from the
  arcade field thus forming finite packets. The horizontal prominence
  field exerts a drag force on the downward moving packets like air on a
  falling droplet. Balancing the gravitational and drag forces yields an
  upper limit on their length of the order of 1000 km. Lateral pressure
  balance limits their width to about 500 km. Pushing themselves at high
  speed through the horizontal field, the plasma "droplets" excite a
  multitude of incoherent Alfvén waves. Nonlinear interactions of these
  waves fill the prominence with a spectrum of oscillatory and propagating
  wave modes. Absorption of part of that wave energy, whose ultimate
  source is gravitational energy, and radiative cooling constitute the
  energy balance of the falling matter and determine the mean fall speed (
  14 km/s). The small scales of the "droplets" and thus of their frozen-in
  magnetic fields explain the absence of vertical components in magnetic
  field measurements. The above estimates of the droplet characteristics
  rest on prominence parameters with mean density of 2.5x1012 cm-3,
  temperature of 7500 K, and horizontal fields of order 8 G.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Towards a European vision for space exploration:
    Recommendations of the Space Advisory Group of the European Commission
Authors: Horneck, Gerda; Coradini, Angioletta; Haerendel, Gerhard;
   Kallenrode, May-Britt; Kamoun, Paul; Swings, Jean Pierre; Tobias,
   Alberto; Tortora, Jean-Jacques
2010SpPol..26..109H    Altcode:
  As a result of increasing public and political interest in 'space'
  (i.e. solar system) exploration at the global scale, the Space Advisory
  Group of the European Commission has evaluated the situation in
  Europe with regard to its potential to participate in this ambitious
  global enterprise. Aspects of science, technology, environment and
  safety, society, spin-offs and international cooperation were all
  considered. The group concluded that Europe possesses sufficient
  key technologies and scientific expertise to play a major role in
  international space exploration and has recommended that the EU
  take a central role to ensure the success of future European space
  exploration, not only to give a clear political signal for the way
  forward but also to ensure an appropriate financial framework. In this
  way Europe would embrace the spirit of the European Space Policy and
  contribute to the knowledge-based society by investing significantly
  in space-based science and technology, thereby playing a strong role
  in international space exploration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral Small-and Meso-Scale Structures, Origin and Function
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Amm, O.; Chaston, C. C.; Fu, S.; Haerendel, G.;
   Juusola, L.; Karlsson, R.; Lanchester, B. S.; Nakamura, R.; Ostgaard,
   N.; Sakanoi, T.; Seran, E.; Whiter, D.
2009AGUFMSM52B..05F    Altcode:
  Discrete auroral arcs regularly display small- and meso-scale
  distortions that can appear suddenly and move with speeds that are
  not related to plasma speeds in the ionosphere but rather represent
  properties of the acceleration processes in the magnetosphere. The
  temporal and spatial structure of each small-scale structure is thus
  evidence for its distinct dynamic role in the interaction between
  the hot magnetospheric and the cold, dense ionospheric plasmas. We
  analyzed passes of Reimei and FAST over the network of THEMIS
  Ground-Based Observatories (GBO) with all-sky cameras to combine
  small- and medium-scale auroral imaging with in-situ measurements of
  the precipitating particles in order to determine the properties and
  characteristics of auroral arcs and embedded small-scale structures. The
  THEMIS or Cluster spacecraft provided additional measurements of
  magnetospheric plasma and the GBO magnetometers allowed for the
  determination of ionospheric currents and their dynamic changes. The
  combination of in-situ and remotely determined auroral arc properties
  allowed for the complete characterization of a substorm breakup arc
  and embedded small-scale structures. We find consistency between
  theoretical expectations and observed values for arc and fold speeds
  and dimensions. The leading edge of the breakup arc with Alfvenic
  accelerated electrons exhibits the fastest fold speeds while the wider
  inverted-V arc shows less structure and internal speeds. Twin vortex
  shear flows observed by two of the THEMIS spacecraft are related to
  the poleward expansion of the breakup arc, the development of the
  substorm current wedge, and the appearance of a strong upward/downward
  current system. The scale size and motion of the small-scale structures
  signifies the dynamics of the magnetospheric plasma and the acceleration
  processes responsible for their generation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ON THE DOWNFLOWS IN HEDGEROW PROMINENCES
Authors: Berger, T. E.; Haerendel, G.
2009AGUFMSH44A..07B    Altcode:
  We analyze the downflows in quiescent prominences with respect to
  width, vertical velocity and acceleration, using sequences of images
  from the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) of the Hinode mission. SOT
  sequences in both 656.3 nm H-alpha and 396.8 nm Ca II H-line bandpasses
  show that the downflows have typical widths of 300 km, lengths up
  to 15 Mm, and speeds on the order of 10--20 km/s. Most downflows
  initiate near the top of the visible-light prominence in the form
  of bright knots and show an initial acceleration before achieving
  relatively constant speeds. Downflows typically end either in the
  chromosphere below the prominence or on large arches that sometimes
  form lower boundaries to the prominences. In some cases, downflows
  are strongly deflected by arches indicating a large gradient in the
  magnetic field at those locations. The vertical coherence of most of
  the threads over much of the prominence height suggests a continuous
  stream of plasma. The frozen-field condition implies the presence of
  vertical magnetic field dragged by the downflow with balanced up and
  down polarity. This explains the absence of vertical components in
  magnetic field measurements. The large-scale horizontal field plays
  an important role in the dynamics of the downflow, in two ways. It
  compresses the thread plasma and field and presents an obstacle
  to the downflow. The energy gained by falling in the gravitational
  field is in part expended in stretching the vertical field, in part
  in pushing the horizontal field out of the way and in part by covering
  the radiative losses of the compressed plasma. With total densities of
  the order of nearly 10^12 cm-3 and horizontal fields of order 10 G,
  energy and force balance yield vertical velocities of about 10 km/s
  and temperatures of 7000-8000 K. The threads are nourished by plasma
  inflow from outside the prominence along largely horizontal fields
  and sudden onset of gravitational instability.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Fundamental Issues of Auroral Arc Formation (Invited)
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2009AGUFMSM52B..01H    Altcode:
  Auroral forms are not footprints of magnetospheric processes,
  but the product of an interaction of the source plasma in the
  outer magnetosphere and tail with the ionosphere. Alfvén waves,
  quasi-stationary or propagating, are the agent of this interaction. They
  transport magnetic shear stresses and energy towards the Earth. Two
  principles govern the creation of auroral forms, (1) magnetic stress
  release and (2) maximization of the energy deposition. The first has
  two channels, auroral particle acceleration above or in the topside
  ionosphere and ohmic dissipation through Pedersen currents in the
  lower ionosphere. Maximization of the energy conversion is achieved by
  impedance matching between the incoming Alfvén wave and the effective
  resistance of the auroral acceleration region. The latter has various
  forms, depending on current direction and background density. The
  typical narrow width of auroral forms is a direct result of the
  impedance matching. Even thinner forms can arise from cavity formation
  at the interface between ionosphere and lower magnetosphere. The
  motion of auroral rays is witness of the release of magnetic shear
  stresses. Auroral arcs can be classified as (1) embedded arcs, (2)
  Hall generator arcs, and (3) Alfvénic arcs. They are distinguished
  by the geometry of the generator forces and currents as well as by
  the types of closure currents in the ionosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Evaporation via Alfvén Waves
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2009ApJ...707..903H    Altcode:
  This paper presents a scenario for the chromospheric evaporation
  during solar flares, which is inspired by the chain of events leading
  to the formation of auroral arcs and ionospheric evacuation during
  magnetospheric substorms. The plasma, ejected from high coronal
  altitudes during a flare reconnection event, accumulates at the tops
  of coronal loops by braking of the reconnection flow, possibly by fast
  shock formation. A high-beta layer forms and distorts the magnetic
  field. Energy contained in magnetic shear stresses is transported as
  Alfvén waves from the loop-top toward the chromosphere. It is shown
  that under these conditions the Alfvén waves carry enough energy to
  feed the chromospheric evaporation process. The second subject of this
  investigation is identification of the most effective energy dumping
  or wave dissipation process. Several processes are being analyzed:
  ion-neutral collisions, classical and anomalous field-aligned current
  dissipation, and critical velocity ionization. All of them are being
  discarded, either because they turn out to be insufficient or imply
  very unlikely physical properties of the wave modes. It is finally
  concluded that turbulent fragmentation of the Alfvén waves entering
  the chromosphere can generate the required damping. The basic process
  would be phase mixing caused by a strongly inhomogeneous distribution
  of Alfvénic phase speed and laminar flow breakup by Kelvin-Helmholtz
  (K-H) instability. The filamentary (fibril) structure of the
  chromosphere thus appears to be essential for the energy conversion,
  in which the K-H instability is the first step in a chain of processes
  leading to ion thermalization, electron heating, and neutral particle
  ionization. Quantitative estimates suggest that a transverse structure
  with scales not far below 100 km suffices to produce strong wave damping
  within a few seconds. Nonthermal broadening of some metallic ion lines
  observed during the pre-impulsive rise phase of a flare might be a
  residue of the turbulent breakup process.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Poleward arcs of the auroral oval during substorms and the
    inner edge of the plasma sheet
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2009JGRA..114.6214H    Altcode: 2009JGRA..11406214H
  An analytical model for the connection between the near-Earth edge of
  the plasma sheet at substorm onset and the auroral arcs at the poleward
  edge of the auroral oval is presented. The connection is established
  through the existence of a Boström type I current system. Its generator
  is assumed to be constituted by a narrow high-beta plasma layer
  located at the interface between the near-Earth plasma sheet and the
  outer edge of the near-dipolar field of the magnetosphere. The energy
  balance between the downward Poynting flux and the energy conversion
  in the auroral acceleration region and ionosphere provides a relation
  for the electric fields as a function of the upward field-aligned
  current. Only the upward current region is being considered in this
  work. An interesting effect, incorporated in the energy balance,
  is the feedback of the auroral electrojet on the magnetospheric
  plasma by dragging the latter eastward from below under the action
  of a Hall generator. Thereby a relation arises between the westward
  electric field, tangential to the arc, and the equatorward polarization
  field. Quantitative solution of the energy equation is achieved by using
  the empirical relations between auroral energy flux and electron energy
  and the integrated Hall and Pedersen conductivities. Accommodation
  of the downward energy flux requires the existence of a minimum arc
  length. The resulting quantities are consistent with typical auroral
  data sets. Relating the downward energy flux to the parameters of the
  generator reveals a strong dependence of polarization electric field,
  overall energy dissipation, and total current strength on the plasma
  beta of the generator. The dumping of excess energy from the high-beta
  plasma layer into the auroral arc(s) allows the stretched tail field
  lines to transform into dipolar field lines. It opens, so-to-speak,
  the gate into the outer magnetosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral arc and oval electrodynamics in the Harang region
Authors: Marghitu, O.; Karlsson, T.; Klecker, B.; Haerendel, G.;
   McFadden, J.
2009JGRA..114.3214M    Altcode: 2009JGRA..11403214M
  Auroral arcs are typically described in terms of an upward field-aligned
  current (FAC) sheet above the arc, connected by ionospheric Pedersen
  current to a downward FAC sheet near the arc. On the basis of data
  measured by the FAST spacecraft, conjugate with ground optical
  observations, we present first a wide and stable winter evening arc,
  where this standard model does not apply. The arc is observed in
  the Harang region during the growth phase of a modest substorm,
  poleward of the convection reversal (CR) boundary. Although the
  magnetic field data suggest the typical configuration, the two FAC
  sheets appear to be decoupled near the satellite footprint: the upward
  FAC is fed by the westward electrojet (WEJ), while the downward FAC
  feeds the eastward electrojet (EEJ). The examination of the arc by
  the newly developed ALADYN technique confirms this peculiar current
  topology. For comparison, we apply ALADYN also to a second evening
  arc, located within the Harang region equatorward from the CR. The
  arc is confirmed to have the standard configuration, consistent with
  a former study, but substantial FAC-EJ coupling is inferred in the
  auroral oval both poleward and equatorward of the arc. A key element
  for the topology of the current closure is the westward component of
  the electric field, which influences the relative location of the CR
  with respect to the large-scale FAC reversal (FR) boundary. As proved
  by tests on synthetic data, a westward component of the electric field
  pushes the CR toward the FR, preventing thus the standard FAC closure,
  while the conductance and FAC pattern shape the CR profile. Since a
  westward electric field is often measured in the Harang region, the
  FAC-EJ coupling is expected to be an essential ingredient there. This
  has important implications for the current closure in the equatorial
  magnetosphere and for the auroral current circuit in the WEJ region,
  closely related to the substorm process.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ESSC-ESF Position Paper-Science-Driven Scenario for Space
Exploration: Report from the European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC)
Authors: Worms, Jean-Claude; Lammer, Helmut; Barucci, Antonella; Beebe,
   Reta; Bibring, Jean-Pierre; Blamont, Jacques; Blanc, Michel; Bonnet,
   Roger; Brucato, John R.; Chassefière, Eric; Coradini, Angioletta;
   Crawford, Ian; Ehrenfreund, Pascale; Falcke, Heino; Gerzer, Rupert;
   Grady, Monica; Grande, Manuel; Haerendel, Gerhard; Horneck, Gerda;
   Koch, Bernhard; Lobanov, Andreï; Lopez-Moreno, José J.; Marco,
   Robert; Norsk, Peter; Rothery, Dave; Swings, Jean-Pierre; Tropea,
   Cam; Ulamec, Stephan; Westall, Frances; Zarnecki, John
2009AsBio...9...23W    Altcode:
  In 2005 the then ESA Directorate for Human Spaceflight, Microgravity
  and Exploration (D-HME) commissioned a study from the European Science
  Foundation's (ESF) European Space Sciences Committee (ESSC) to examine
  the science aspects of the Aurora Programme in preparation for the
  December 2005 Ministerial Conference of ESA Member States, held in
  Berlin. A first interim report was presented to ESA at the second
  stakeholders meeting on 30 and 31 May 2005. A second draft report was
  made available at the time of the final science stakeholders meeting
  on 16 September 2005 in order for ESA to use its recommendations to
  prepare the Executive proposal to the Ministerial Conference. The final
  ESSC report on that activity came a few months after the Ministerial
  Conference (June 2006) and attempted to capture some elements of the new
  situation after Berlin, and in the context of the reduction in NASA's
  budget that was taking place at that time; e.g., the postponement sine
  die of the Mars Sample Return mission. At the time of this study,
  ESSC made it clear to ESA that the timeline imposed prior to the
  Berlin Conference had not allowed for a proper consultation of the
  relevant science community and that this should be corrected in the
  near future. In response to that recommendation, ESSC was asked again
  in the summer of 2006 to initiate a broad consultation to define a
  science-driven scenario for the Aurora Programme. This exercise ran
  between October 2006 and May 2007. ESA provided the funding for staff
  support, publication costs, and costs related to meetings of a Steering
  Group, two meetings of a larger ad hoc group (7 and 8 December 2006
  and 8 February 2007), and a final scientific workshop on 15 and 16
  May 2007 in Athens. As a result of these meetings a draft report was
  produced and examined by the Ad Hoc Group. Following their endorsement
  of the report and its approval by the plenary meeting of the ESSC, the
  draft report was externally refereed, as is now normal practice with
  all ESSC-ESF reports, and amended accordingly. The Ad Hoc Group defined
  overarching scientific goals for Europe's exploration programme, dubbed
  "Emergence and co-evolution of life with its planetary environments,"
  focusing on those targets that can ultimately be reached by humans,
  i.e., Mars, the Moon, and Near Earth Objects. Mars was further
  recognized as the focus of that programme, with Mars sample return as
  the recognized primary goal; furthermore the report clearly states
  that Europe should position itself as a major actor in defining and
  leading Mars sample return missions. The report is reproduced in
  this article. On 26 November 2008 the Ministers of ESA Member States
  decided to give a high strategic priority to the robotic exploration
  programme of Mars by funding the enhanced ExoMars mission component,
  in line therefore with the recommendations from this ESSC-ESF report.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral arcs as current transformers
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2008JGRA..113.7205H    Altcode:
  We treat the effects of an electric field tangential to an auroral arc
  on the basis of an analytical model according to which auroral arcs
  are energized by the release of magnetic shear stresses and associated
  internal energy (Haerendel, 2007). If the tangential field exceeds a
  certain (low) threshold, the ionosphere acts as a current generator,
  or better transformer, and the magnetosphere as the load. The reason is
  that energy supplied by a longitudinal Type I current system, as defined
  by Boström in 1964, is transformed into energy of the latitudinal Type
  II current system attached to the arc and is mostly consumed by the
  auroral acceleration process. Closure of the transformer current in the
  upper magnetosphere and energy deposition in form of internal energy
  and shear stresses, although small, are crucial for the operation of
  this process. It can be visualized as a dragging of magnetic field and
  plasma along the arc in the direction of higher magnetospheric pressure
  enforced by the electric polarization field. This energy deposition
  from below is superimposed on the release of free energy supplied by
  the magnetospheric generator. Formulation of this scenario leads to
  a set of algebraic equations, whose solution provides quantitative
  answers on the interdependence of current closure, energy deposition,
  and enhanced auroral energy flux in relation to the imposed tangential
  electric field. Contrary to earlier expectations, the polarization field
  appears not as a consequence of current blockage, but as manifestation
  of its continuation by field-aligned currents and their closure in
  the magnetosphere. Another consequence of the energy deposition from
  below is a small modification of the arc's proper motion in the ambient
  plasma frame. A procedure for evaluating applicable measurements in
  terms of the underlying physics is given and a concrete example added.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chromospheric Evaporation by Pressure-driven Alfven Waves
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2008cosp...37.1150H    Altcode: 2008cosp.meet.1150H
  In analogy to the situation in the near-Earth tail during substorms,
  we pursue a flare model in which the hot loop-top plasma, piling up
  from the downward reconnection jet, is characterized by high beta (∼1)
  and average ion energy substantially above the electron energy. In case
  of the magnetosphere, the average ratio is about seven. We envision
  flux-tubes with a few thousand km transverse scales, which appear as
  post-flare loops when filled with observable plasma due to chromospheric
  evaporation. The hot loop-top plasma masses distort the magnetic field,
  and the resulting shear stresses propagate as Alfvén waves towards
  the solar atmosphere carrying a e substantial amount of momentum and
  energy. The lateral flanks of the high-beta plasma concentrations
  are unstable and can generate a cascade of small-scale density
  perturbations, which act as sources of small-scale Alfvén waves. The
  characteristic growth-time of the perturbations e is much shorter than
  the travel time of the waves towards the chromosphere and the energy
  exchange time between ion and electrons. In spite of a certain amount of
  wave reflection at the top of the chromosphere, energy will be quickly
  coupled into this region within a few reflection periods. Waves with
  transverse scales near 1 km provide the most effective ohmic dissipation
  via their associated field-aligned currents. It is demonstrated that
  this energy input suffices to heat the chromospheric gas to energies
  near 1 keV leading to fast "evaporation" or ablation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral arcs as sites of magnetic stress release
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2007JGRA..112.9214H    Altcode: 2007JGRA..11209214H
  An analytical model is presented for auroral arcs as the result of a
  fast release of magnetic shear stresses. The shear stresses are set
  up by a longitudinal convection that is driven by pressure forces in
  the outer magnetosphere against the frictional forces exerted in the
  lower ionosphere. A distorted-dipole geometry is employed allowing for
  high plasma beta near the equator. Steep ledges in the radial pressure
  distribution, extending along the direction of convection, are invoked
  as the sources of the auroral current sheets. The differential magnetic
  energy content of these narrow current sheets is released within a few
  Alfvén transit times by the decoupling of the magnetospheric plasma
  and field from the ionosphere, owing to the existence of field-aligned
  potential drops in the auroral acceleration region, and converted
  into kinetic energy of the primary auroral particles. A well-known
  current-voltage relation is employed for the formulation of the energy
  conversion process. This scenario has two important consequences. (1)
  The loss of magnetic energy creates a concomitant decrease of internal
  energy of the generator plasma and results in a progression of pressure
  ledge and auroral current sheet into the more highly stressed magnetic
  field region. This is the reason for the observed proper motion of
  auroral arcs with respect to the plasma frame. (2) Plasma and field
  undergo a rapid stress relief motion along the arc with large but mostly
  reversible displacements. The net displacement, equivalent to a small
  S-shaped contribution to the essentially U-shaped potential distribution
  above the auroral arc, is consistent with the transit of the field lines
  through the progressing current sheet. This scenario is cast into a
  set of simple relations expressing the key parameters of auroral arcs,
  such as width, energy flux, potential drop, and proper motion. The main
  ingredient herein is an auxiliary magnetic perturbation field into which
  the main properties of the large-scale current system are condensed. It
  corresponds to about twice the transverse magnetic perturbation field
  near the arc and thus to the total shear stresses. Two free parameters
  are the relative magnitude of the pressure jump at the ledge in the
  source plasma and the plasma beta. Matching the quantitative results
  of the relations for the arc properties with observed values suggests
  pressure jumps of order 10% and beta values between 1 and 5.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ROMAP: Rosetta Magnetometer and Plasma Monitor
Authors: Auster, H. U.; Apathy, I.; Berghofer, G.; Remizov, A.; Roll,
   R.; Fornacon, K. H.; Glassmeier, K. H.; Haerendel, G.; Hejja, I.;
   Kührt, E.; Magnes, W.; Moehlmann, D.; Motschmann, U.; Richter,
   I.; Rosenbauer, H.; Russell, C. T.; Rustenbach, J.; Sauer, K.;
   Schwingenschuh, K.; Szemerey, I.; Waesch, R.
2007SSRv..128..221A    Altcode: 2007SSRv..tmp...29A
  The scientific objectives, design and capabilities of the Rosetta
  Lander's ROMAP instrument are presented. ROMAP's main scientific goals
  are longterm magnetic field and plasma measurements of the surface of
  Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in order to study cometary activity
  as a function of heliocentric distance, and measurements during
  the Lander's descent to investigate the structure of the comet's
  remanent magnetisation. The ROMAP fluxgate magnetometer, electrostatic
  analyser and Faraday cup measure the magnetic field from 0 to 32 Hz,
  ions of up to 8000 keV and electrons of up to 4200 keV. Additional two
  types of pressure sensors - Penning and Minipirani - cover a pressure
  range from 10<SUP>−8</SUP> to 10<SUP>1</SUP> mbar. ROMAP's sensors
  and electronics are highly integrated, as required by a combined
  field/plasma instrument with less than 1 W power consumption and 1
  kg mass.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Cosima   High Resolution Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion Mass
    Spectrometer for the Analysis of Cometary Dust Particles onboard
    Rosetta
Authors: Kissel, J.; Altwegg, K.; Clark, B. C.; Colangeli, L.;
   Cottin, H.; Czempiel, S.; Eibl, J.; Engrand, C.; Fehringer, H. M.;
   Feuerbacher, B.; Fomenkova, M.; Glasmachers, A.; Greenberg, J. M.;
   Grün, E.; Haerendel, G.; Henkel, H.; Hilchenbach, M.; von Hoerner,
   H.; Höfner, H.; Hornung, K.; Jessberger, E. K.; Koch, A.; Krüger,
   H.; Langevin, Y.; Parigger, P.; Raulin, F.; Rüdenauer, F.; Rynö,
   J.; Schmid, E. R.; Schulz, R.; Silén, J.; Steiger, W.; Stephan, T.;
   Thirkell, L.; Thomas, R.; Torkar, K.; Utterback, N. G.; Varmuza, K.;
   Wanczek, K. P.; Werther, W.; Zscheeg, H.
2007SSRv..128..823K    Altcode: 2007SSRv..tmp...39K
  The ESA mission Rosetta, launched on March 2nd, 2004, carries an
  instrument suite to the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The COmetary
  Secondary Ion Mass Anaylzer - COSIMA - is one of three cometary dust
  analyzing instruments onboard Rosetta. COSIMA is based on the analytic
  measurement method of secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). The
  experiment's goal is in-situ analysis of the elemental composition
  (and isotopic composition of key elements) of cometary grains. The
  chemical characterization will include the main organic components,
  present homologous and functional groups, as well as the mineralogical
  and petrographical classification of the inorganic phases. All this
  analysis is closely related to the chemistry and history of the early
  solar system. COSIMA covers a mass range from 1 to 3500 amu with a
  mass resolution m/Δm @ 50% of 2000 at mass 100 amu. Cometary dust is
  collected on special, metal covered, targets, which are handled by a
  target manipulation unit. Once exposed to the cometary dust environment,
  the collected dust grains are located on the target by a microscopic
  camera. A pulsed primary indium ion beam (among other entities) releases
  secondary ions from the dust grains. These ions, either positive or
  negative, are selected and accelerated by electrical fields and travel
  a well-defined distance through a drift tube and an ion reflector. A
  microsphere plate with dedicated amplifier is used to detect the
  ions. The arrival times of the ions are digitized, and the mass
  spectra of the secondary ions are calculated from these time-of-flight
  spectra. Through the instrument commissioning, COSIMA took the very
  first SIMS spectra of the targets in space. COSIMA will be the first
  instrument applying the SIMS technique in-situ to cometary grain
  analysis as Rosetta approaches the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko,
  after a long journey of 10 years, in 2014.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Exploration needs cooperation
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2007SpReT.169...32H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Commonalities Between Ionosphere and Chromosphere
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2007sdeh.book..317H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Commonalities Between Ionosphere and Chromosphere
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2006SSRv..124..317H    Altcode: 2007SSRv..tmp...46H
  Three types of processes, occurring in the weakly ionized plasmas of the
  Earth’s ionosphere as well as in the solar chromosphere, are being
  compared with each other. The main objective is to elaborate on the
  differences introduced primarily by the grossly different magnitudes
  of the densities, both with respect to the neutral and, even more so,
  to the plasma constituents. This leads to great differences in the
  momentum coupling from the plasma to the neutral component and becomes
  clear when considering the direct electric current component transverse
  to the magnetic field, called “Pedersen current”; in the ionosphere,
  which has no quasi-static counterpart in the chromosphere. The three
  classes of processes are related to the dynamical response of the two
  plasmas to energy influx from below and from above. In the first two
  cases, the energy is carried by waves. The third class concerns plasma
  erosion or ablation in the two respective regions in reaction to the
  injection of high Poynting and/or energetic particle fluxes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The enigma of auroral spirals
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2006cosp...36.1991H    Altcode: 2006cosp.meet.1991H
  One of the most spectacular forms that the aurora borealis can assume
  is the large-scale spiral Spirals are dominantly observed along
  the poleward boundary of the auroral oval during active periods Two
  concepts have been pursued in explaining their origin and in particular
  the counterclockwise sense of rotation of the luminous structures when
  viewed along the magnetic field direction An essentially magnetostatic
  theory following Hallinan 1976 attributes the spiral pattern to
  the twisting of field-lines caused by a centrally located upward
  field-aligned current According to Oguti 1981 and followers a clockwise
  rotation of the plasma flow produces the anticlockwise structure
  There are observations seemingly confirming or contradicting either
  theory In this paper it is argued that both concepts are insufficient
  in that only parts of the underlying physics are considered Besides
  field-aligned currents and plasma flow one has to take into at least
  two further aspects The ionospheric conductivity modified by particle
  precipitation has an impact on the magnetospheric plasma dynamics
  Furthermore auroral arcs are not fixed entities subject to distortions
  by plasma flows or twisted field-lines but sites of transient releases
  of energy We suggest that auroral spirals are ports of entry or exit
  of plasma into or out of the auroral oval This way it can be understood
  why a clockwise plasma flow can create an anticlockwise luminous pattern

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The FIELDS Instrumentation Package on MMS
Authors: Torbert, R. B.; Ergun, R. E.; Russell, C.; Roux, A.;
   Lindqvist, P.; Vaith, H.; Glassmeier, K.; Baumjohann, W.; Torkar,
   K.; Steller, M.; Kletzing, C.; Bounds, S.; Eriksson, A.; Andre, M.;
   Paschmann, G.; Haerendel, G.; Slavin, J.; Farrell, W.; Anderson,
   B.; Westfall, J.; Bylander, L.; Auster, U.; Bouabdellah, A.; Corbel,
   C.; Le Contel, O.; Means, J.; Marklund, G.; Quinn, J.; Needell, G.;
   Kudirka, F.; Rau, D.; Bodet, D.; Tyler, J.
2005AGUFMSM23A0392T    Altcode:
  One of the most challenging scientific requirements of MMS is to
  provide precise measurements of ExB flows and parallel electric
  fields within and around the diffusion regions associated with
  reconnection. The FIELDS suite as part of the selected SMART payload
  will resolve transient structures on scales down to 1 km (sampling
  time scales of 1-10 ms), determine boundary orientation and motion,
  and detect plasma waves that play a critical role in reconnection. The
  FIELDS instrumentation combines the most accurate 3D double-probe
  electric-field measurement yet assembled for high-altitude missions
  with two precise fluxgate instruments, a set of electric and magnetic
  wave detectors, and a flight-proven electron drift instrument in
  one integrated package in which time bases are coordinated, offsets
  inter-determined, and in-flight calibration performed. This talk
  will describe the FIELDS instrumentation and how it will address the
  critical measurements that must be performed on MMS to improve our
  understanding of the reconnection process.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: COSIMA: a High Resolution Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion
    Mass Spectrometer for Cometary Dust Particles on Its Way to Comet
    67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenkov
Authors: Kissel, J.; Höfner, H.; Haerendel, G.; Czempiel, S.; Eibl,
   J.; Henkel, H.; Koch, A.; Glasmachers, A.; Torkar, K.; Rüdenauer, F.;
   Steiger, W.; Krueger, F. R.; Jessberger, E. K.; Stephan, T.; Gruen,
   E.; Thomas, R.; Langevin, Y.; von Hoerner, H.; Silen, J.; Rynö, J.;
   Genzer, M.; Hornung, K.; Schulz, R.; Hilchenbach, M.; Fischer, H.;
   Krüger, H.; Tubiana, C.; Thirkell, L.; Varmuza, K.; Cosima Team
2005LPICo1280...94K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ALADYN: A method to investigate auroral arc electrodynamics
    from satellite data
Authors: Marghitu, O.; Klecker, B.; Haerendel, G.; McFadden, J.
2004JGRA..10911305M    Altcode:
  In the simplest representation of an auroral arc current system,
  the arc consists of a homogeneous block of increased conductance
  infinitely extended in longitudinal direction; field-aligned current
  (FAC) sheets that flow in and out of the ionosphere at the boundaries
  of the arc are connected through Pedersen current across the arc,
  while the electrojet (EJ) that flows along the arc as Hall current
  is divergence-free. To evaluate the deviation of the real arc current
  system from this ideal configuration, we developed the ALADYN (Auroral
  Arc Electrodynamics) method, based on a parametric model of the arc,
  that allows the derivation of the parameters by numerical fit to the
  experimental data. The method is illustrated with a wide, stable,
  winter evening arc, for which both Fast Auroral Snapshot (FAST)
  Explorer measurements at 3850 km altitude and ground optical data are
  available. We find that in order to obtain consistent results, one has
  to take into account, as a minimum, the ionospheric polarization, the
  contribution of the Hall current to the meridional closure of the FAC,
  and the coupling between the FAC and the EJ.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Subauroral morning proton spots (SAMPS) as a result of
    plasmapause-ring-current interaction
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Haerendel, G.; Mende, S. B.; Forrester, W. T.;
   Immel, T. J.; ØStgaard, N.
2004JGRA..10910305F    Altcode:
  The proton aurora imager SI-12 on the IMAGE spacecraft occasionally
  observes subauroral morning proton spots (SAMPS) that rotate with 70-95%
  of the Earth's corotation speed. Coincident particle measurements by
  DMSP confirm the source to be pure precipitating protons with mean
  energies likely above the detector limit of 30 keV. The spots appear in
  the recovery phase after magnetic storms and last for 1-4 hours in the
  magnetic local time region of 0300-1200 hours. The latitude location
  is strongly related to the minimum Dst of the previous geomagnetic
  storm with the lowest latitude observations after the strongest
  storms. The rotation speed is related to the latitude (L shell) of
  the spots with the largest corotation lags for spots that map to the
  largest L shells. IMAGE-EUV observations of the plasmasphere indicate a
  relationship with density gradients in the expanding plasmasphere after
  magnetic storms. We interpret these spots as the result of wave-particle
  interaction. As one likely process, we suggest the interaction of ring
  current protons with electromagnetic ion-cyclotron (EMIC) waves as a
  result of the expansion and subrotation of the dense, cold plasmasphere
  ions. The appearance of subauroral proton spots is therefore a
  consequence of the plasmasphere refilling after geomagnetic storms.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Cluster observes formation of high-beta plasma blobs
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Georgescu, E.; Glassmeier, K.; Klecker, B.;
   Bogdanova, Y.; Rème, H.; Frey, H.
2004AnGeo..22.2391H    Altcode:
  Available from <A
  href="http://www.copernicus.org/site/EGU/annales/22/7/2391.htm?FrameEngine=false;">http://www.copernicus.org/site/EGU/annales/22/7/2391.htm?FrameEngine=false;</A>

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The European White Paper on space: enough support for basic
    science?
Authors: Worms, J. -C.; Haerendel, G.
2004SpPol..20...73W    Altcode:
  Where is European space science heading? The 'Green Paper on
  European Space Policy' served as the main background document for a
  European-wide consultation process on space-related issues which took
  place in 2003, but none of the 12 questions posed in that document
  specifically addressed nor recognised the role of fundamental research
  in underpinning any policy for space. As a result of that consultation,
  this approach was partly corrected in the European Commission's 'White
  Paper' on space, but uncertainties remain. Involvement in first-class
  science is absolutely essential for the promotion of European
  interests and leadership, as it imparts a strong strategic drive to its
  technological and industrial system. This article discusses the contents
  of the White Paper and attempts to suggest lines of action concerning
  space science in relation with the strategy laid out in that document.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Cometary and Interstellar Dust Analyzer for comet Wild 2
Authors: Kissel, J.; Glasmachers, A.; Grün, E.; Henkel, H.; Höfner,
   H.; Haerendel, G.; von Hoerner, H.; Hornung, K.; Jessberger, E. K.;
   Krueger, F. R.; Möhlmann, D.; Greenberg, J. M.; Langevin, Y.; Silén,
   J.; Brownlee, D.; Clark, B. C.; Hanner, M. S.; Hoerz, F.; Sandford, S.;
   Sekanina, Z.; Tsou, P.; Utterback, N. G.; Zolensky, M. E.; Heiss, C.
2003JGRE..108.8114K    Altcode:
  The Cometary and Interstellar Dust Analyzer (CIDA) instrument analyzes
  the composition of individual grains in the cometary coma. As each
  particle impacts a silver plate, the high-impact energy due to the
  relative velocity of the spacecraft as it flies through the coma
  causes the elements and molecular compounds in the particle to become
  ionized. Using a fast time-of-flight mass spectrometer, a complete set
  of ions are detected for each impact, from a mass range of 1 (atomic
  hydrogen) up to a few thousand atomic mass units, encompassing all
  elements in the periodic table and many molecules, such as organic
  compounds. This experimental technique has already been applied with
  excellent success at Halley's comet, and the CIDA derivative instrument
  is flying on the Stardust mission, which will encounter comet Wild 2
  in January of 2004. The data returned will give clues to the elemental
  and chemical composition of the dust component of this comet.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Shock aurora: FAST and DMSP observations
Authors: Zhou, X. -Y.; Strangeway, R. J.; Anderson, P. C.; Sibeck,
   D. G.; Tsurutani, B. T.; Haerendel, G.; Frey, H. U.; Arballo, J. K.
2003JGRA..108.8019Z    Altcode:
  Global signatures of the aurora caused by interplanetary shocks/pressure
  pulses have been studied in recent years using ultraviolet imager
  data from polar orbiting spacecraft. The signatures include the
  occurrence of the aurora first near local noon and then propagation
  antisunward along the auroral oval at very high speeds. To better
  understand the mechanisms of particle precipitation, in this paper we
  study shock auroras using near-Earth observations of the FAST and DMSP
  satellites. We have studied the events that occurred during 1996-2000
  where FAST and/or DMSP crossed the dawnside or duskside auroral zone
  within 10 min after shocks/pressure pulses arrived at the nose of the
  magnetopause. It is found that the electron precipitation increased
  significantly above the dawnside and duskside auroral oval zone after
  the shock/pressure pulse arrivals. The precipitation structure is
  low-energy electrons (&lt;∼1 keV) at higher latitudes (∼75°-83°
  ILAT within 0600-0900 MLT) and high-energy electrons (∼1-10 keV)
  at lower latitudes (∼65°-79° ILAT) of the auroral zone. There are
  a few degrees (1°-4° ILAT) of overlap between these two categories
  of precipitated electrons. The precipitation of low-energy electrons
  was along highly structured field-aligned currents. The precipitation
  of the high-energy electrons was highly isotropic filling the loss
  cone. Possible mechanisms of field-aligned current generation are
  some dynamic processes occurring on the dayside magnetopause, such as
  magnetic shearing, magnetopause perturbation, magnetic reconnection,
  and Alfvén wave generation. Adiabatic compression might have caused
  the high-energy electron precipitation. On the basis of observations
  of FAST and DMSP, shock auroras are speculated to be diffuse auroras
  at the lower latitudes of the dayside auroral oval and discrete auroras
  on the poleward boundary of the oval with a few latitude degree overlap
  of the two types of auroras.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Inductive electromagnetic effects in solar current-carrying
    magnetic loops
Authors: Khodachenko, M.; Haerendel, G.; Rucker, H. O.
2003A&A...401..721K    Altcode:
  Effects of electromagnetic inductive interactions in groups of slowly
  growing current-carrying loops are studied. Each loop is considered as
  an equivalent electric circuit with variable resistivity and inductive
  coefficients. These parameters depend on the geometry of the loop, its
  position with respect to neighboring loops, as well as on the plasma
  temperature and density in the magnetic tube. By means of such a model
  the process of generation of currents and temperature change in coronal
  loops moving relative to each other, and their dynamic interaction
  were studied. There are three main results of this analysis. First,
  the possibility of a relatively quick development of a significant
  longitudinal current in a rising and initially current-free magnetic
  loop is demonstrated. Second, the processes of fast, flare-like,
  plasma temperature increase in inductively connected growing loops
  with high enough currents, ~ 10<SUP>10</SUP> - 10<SUP>11</SUP> A,
  as well as run-away electrons acceleration in the loops by inductive
  electric fields are modelled. And third, based on the analysis of
  a ponderomotoric interaction of current-carrying magnetic loops,
  conditions for their oscillations or a fast change of the loops
  inclination, possibly resulting in their coalescence and magnetic
  reconnection, are studied. The main characteristics of the oscillatory
  dynamics of a loop were calculated.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Ground-based Calibration of SWS
Authors: Feuchtgruber, H.; Katterloher, R. O.; Jakob, G.; Lutz,
   D.; Barl, L.; Bauer, O. H.; Becher, K.; Beintema, D. A.; Boonstra,
   A. J.; Boxhoorn, D. R.; Coté, J.; Czempiel, S.; van Dijkhuizen, C.;
   de Graauw, T.; Drapatz, S.; Evers, J.; Frericks, M.; Genzel, R.;
   Glas, M.; de Groene, P.; Haerendel, G.; Haser, L.; Heras, A. M.;
   Horinga, W.; van der Hucht, K. A.; van der Hulst, T.; Huygen, R.;
   Jacobs, H.; Kamm, N.; Kampermann, T.; Kester, D. J. M.; Koornneef,
   J.; Kunze, D.; Lahuis, F.; Lamers, H. J. G. L. M.; Leech, K.; van der
   Lei, S.; van der Linden, R.; Luinge, W.; Melzner, F.; Morris, P. W.;
   Ploeger, G. R.; Price, S. D.; Roelfsema, P. R.; Salama, A.; Schaeidt,
   S. G.; Sijm, N.; Spakman, J.; Späth, H.; Steinmayer, M.; Stöcker,
   J.; Sturm, E.; Valentijn, E. A.; Vandenbussche, B.; Waelkens, C.;
   Wesselius, P. R.; Wieprecht, E.; Wiezorrek, E.; Wijnbergen, J. J.;
   Wildeman, K.; Young, E.
2003ESASP.481...67F    Altcode: 2003clim.conf...67F
  We present a summary of all ground based SWS instrument tests and
  calibrations together with a description of test equipment and
  environment. The contents and results of the SWS ground calibration
  are discussed and their value for the in-flight calibration of SWS
  is demonstrated.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The interstellar environment of the heliosphere
Authors: Breitschwerdt, Dieter; Haerendel, Gerhard
2003ieh..conf.....B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Conditions for auroral particle acceleration
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2002AdSpR..30.1763H    Altcode:
  Auroral particle acceleration is the result of the appearance of
  effective resistance in field-parallel electric currents and of the
  voltages needed to overcome them. The basic condition for that to
  occur is that the field-aligned current density somewhere in the
  system approaches the thermal flux of the background electrons. The
  generation of such high-current density is a result of the dynamic
  interaction of the magnetospheric and ionospheric plasmas. The free
  magnetic energy stored in the current system is converted into kinetic
  energy by the auroral acceleration process and, consequently, magnetic
  shear stresses are released. Thus auroral acceleration can be seen as
  the manifestation of a magnetic elasticity problem in low-beta plasmas,
  a problem that may arise in any cosmic system with sufficiently strong
  magnetic field. The lecture concentrates on mechanisms for current
  concentration and the dynamic consequences of energy conversion and
  stress release on the overall system.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Opening Address of the COSPAR President to the COSPAR
    Colloquium on Space Weather Study Using Multi-point Techniques
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2002swsm.confD...7H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Reconnection
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2002css1.book.1007H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Equator-S observation of reconnection coupled to surface waves
Authors: Nikutowski, B.; Büchner, J.; Otto, A.; Kistler, L. M.;
   Korth, A.; Moukis, C.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.
2002AdSpR..29.1129N    Altcode:
  In the morning sector of its near equatorial orbit Equator-S observed
  large magnetic oscillations in the Pc 5 frequency range. The poloidal
  part of the observed oscillations is usually interpreted as being caused
  by surface waves of the magnetopause driven by a Kelvin-Helmholtz
  instability (KHI). We found, however, that these oscillations are
  sometimes additionally superposed with reconnection signatures. This
  occurs during periods of northward interplanetary magnetic field. In
  fact, the Walen relation as a test for reconnection is satisfied for
  many short periods of time. This indicates transient and thin layers
  of reconnection, embedded in the large scale motion. We compared our
  observations with appropriate magnetohydrodynamic simulations allowing
  reconnection in the case of shear flows. Comparing the simulation
  results with the magnetic field and plasma observations we found good
  agreement of simulations and observations. We conclude that Equator-S
  has observed reconnection embedded in Kelvin-Helmholtz instability
  generated vortices in its nonlinear phase.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Correlation studies of compressional Pc5 pulsations in space
    and Ps6 pulsations on the ground
Authors: Vaivads, A.; Baumjohann, W.; Georgescu, E.; Haerendel, G.;
   Nakamura, R.; Lessard, M. R.; Eglitis, P.; Kistler, L. M.; Ergun, R. E.
2001JGR...10629797V    Altcode:
  Compressional Pc5 pulsations in space and Ps6 pulsations on the
  ground are common features observed in the morning sector. Here we
  use a conjunction study of Equator-S, Geotail, and ground stations in
  Canada to show that Ps6 pulsations can be the ground counterpart of
  compressional Pc5 pulsations observed by satellites. Because strong
  Ps6 pulsations are associated with optical omega-band signatures,
  we also suggest that the omega-band counterparts in space might be
  compressional pulsations on the Pc5 scale. We also discuss the magnetic
  field configuration that makes all these observations consistent.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Simultaneous multispectral imaging of the discrete aurora
Authors: Semeter, Joshua; Lummerzheim, Dirk; Haerendel, Gerhard
2001JASTP..63.1981S    Altcode: 2001JATP...63.1981S
  A unique multispectral imager and an associated multispectral analysis
  framework are described which together constitute a new diagnostic
  tool for auroral research. By acquiring spatial and spectral data
  simultaneously, multispectral imaging allows one to exploit physical
  connections between auroral morphology and the auroral optical spectrum
  in a way that sequential spectral imaging cannot. The initial research
  focus is on imaging the transition in the incident energy spectrum
  during the formation of discrete arcs-that is, when the precipitating
  population is characterized by &lt;1keV electrons. A technique is
  presented which uses two spectral bands (centered at 4278 and 7325Å)
  to extend the effective dynamic range of passive imaging to much
  lower energies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The eruptive events on September 30, 1998: 1. The jet
Authors: Bagalá, L. G.; Stenborg, G.; Schwenn, R.; Haerendel, G.
2001JGR...10625239B    Altcode:
  The jet on September 30, 1998, is part of a complex event that
  involved also other eruptive phenomena. Changes in the coronal
  magnetic field topology were observed during the ejection of the
  jet, as deduced from the Fe XIV green line emission. The whole event
  was well observed by both the H-Alpha Solar Telescope for Argentina
  (HASTA) and the Mirror Coronagraph for Argentina (MICA), which are
  installed in the German-Argentinean Solar Observatory at El Leoncito,
  Argentina. The Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT) on board Yohkoh also observed
  the jet. In this work, observations of the first part of this complex
  event showing the evolution of the jet and release of blobs are
  presented. Certain features observed are interpreted as signatures
  of a magnetic reconnection process in the region. We conclude that
  existing theoretical and phenomenological models based on magnetic
  reconnection mechanisms could explain our observations, which span
  three temperature regimes far apart from each other.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Equator-S magnetopause crossings at high time resolution
Authors: Lucek, E. A.; Cargill, P.; Dunlop, M. W.; Kistler, L. M.;
   Balogh, A.; Baumjohann, W.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Georgescu, E.;
   Haerendel, G.
2001JGR...10625409L    Altcode:
  The analysis of 37 Equator-S magnetopause crossings with exceptionally
  smooth profiles in magnetic field magnitude is presented. The crossings
  are distributed through 10 orbits and occur under both northward
  and southward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) conditions. Under
  northward IMF, when subsolar reconnection is not believed to occur,
  the ramp and the field rotation generally overlap. In all 17 cases
  with a southward magnetosheath field, the field rotation to a northward
  direction lies sunward of the start of the ramp in field magnitude. Of
  these cases, five show a field magnitude dip during the field rotation,
  with shorter field rotations tending to be associated with deeper
  minima. We suggest that this characteristic of some of the crossings
  under southward IMF might reflect the distance of the crossing from
  a reconnection site. Field maxima sometimes appear just inside the
  magnetopause, but the occurrence of these features is not confined to
  those crossings showing field minima in the magnetosheath. Examination
  of the field rotation shows that the rotation is rarely circularly
  polarized, even when a field magnitude minimum is absent. Comparison
  with recent two-dimensional hybrid models shows good qualitative
  agreement.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Cluster EDI convection measurements across the high-latitude
    plasma sheet boundary at midnight
Authors: Quinn, J. M.; Paschmann, G.; Torbert, R. B.; Vaith, H.;
   McIlwain, C. E.; Haerendel, G.; Bauer, O.; Bauer, T. M.; Baumjohann,
   W.; Fillius, W.; Foerster, M.; Frey, S.; Georgescu, E.; Kerr, S. S.;
   Kletzing, C. A.; Matsui, H.; Puhl-Quinn, P.; Whipple, E. C.
2001AnGeo..19.1669Q    Altcode:
  We examine two crossings of three Cluster satellites from the polar
  cap into the high-latitude plasma sheet at midnight local time,
  using data from the Electron Drift Instrument (EDI). EDI measures
  the full electron drift velocity in the plane perpendicular to the
  magnetic field for any field and drift directions. The context of the
  measured convection velocities is established by their relation to the
  intense enhancements in 1 keV electrons, also measured by EDI, as the
  satellites move from the polar cap into the plasma sheet boundary. In
  both cases presented here, the cross B convection in the polar cap is
  anti-sunward (toward the nightside plasma sheet) with a small duskward
  component. As the satellites enter the plasma sheet boundary region,
  the dawn-dusk convective flow component reverses its sign, and the
  flow in the meridianal plane (toward the center of the plasma sheet)
  drops substantially. The relatively stable convection in the polar
  cap becomes highly variable as the PSBL is encountered. The timing
  and sequence of the boundary crossings by the Cluster satellites
  are consistent with a relatively static structure on a time scale of
  the few minutes in satellite separations. In one of the two events,
  the plasma sheet boundary has a spatially separate structure that is
  crossed by the satellites before entering the plasma sheet.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Electron Drift Instrument on Cluster: overview of first
    results
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Quinn, J. M.; Torbert, R. B.; Vaith, H.;
   McIlwain, C. E.; Haerendel, G.; Bauer, O. H.; Bauer, T.; Baumjohann,
   W.; Fillius, W.; Förster, M.; Frey, S.; Georgescu, E.; Kerr, S. S.;
   Kletzing, C. A.; Matsui, H.; Puhl-Quinn, P.; Whipple, E. C.
2001AnGeo..19.1273P    Altcode:
  EDI measures the drift velocity of artificially injected electron
  beams. From this drift velocity, the perpendicular electric field
  and the local magnetic field gradients can be deduced when employing
  different electron energies. The technique requires the injection of
  two electron beams at right angles to the magnetic field and the search
  for those directions within the plane that return the beams to their
  associated detectors after one or more gyrations. The drift velocity
  is then derived from the directions of the two beams and/or from the
  difference in their times-of-flight, measured via amplitude-modulation
  and coding of the emitted electron beams and correlation with the
  signal from the returning electrons. After careful adjustment of
  the control parameters, the beam recognition algorithms, and the
  onboard magnetometer calibrations during the commissioning phase, EDI
  is providing excellent data over a wide range of conditions. In this
  paper, we present first results in a variety of regions ranging from the
  polar cap, across the magnetopause, and well into the magnetosheath.<BR
  /><BR />Key words. Electron drift velocity (electric fields; plasma
  convection; instruments and techniques)

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Persistent quasiperiodic precipitation of suprathermal ambient
    electrons in decaying auroral arcs
Authors: Semeter, Joshua; Vogt, Joachim; Haerendel, Gerhard; Lynch,
   Kristina; Arnoldy, Roger
2001JGR...10612863S    Altcode:
  An analysis of ground-based images and rocket-borne electron data from
  the Physics of Auroral Zone Electrons II rocket experiment suggests
  that suprathermal ambient electrons, precipitating in field-aligned
  bursts, may play an active role in regulating the decay of auroral
  potential structures. A set of discrete arcs were observed to form in
  quasiperiodic succession behind a passing westward traveling surge. The
  nascent arcs faded rapidly, losing 90% of their luminosity within
  15 s. The fading then abruptly stopped at a brightness consistent
  with a peak electron energy of ~1.5 keV. Rocket-borne measurements
  of energetic electrons over the residual arcs 2 min later revealed a
  superposition of hot isotropic and cold ionospheric electrons, the
  latter precipitated in dispersive periodic (3-5 Hz) bursts from a
  source altitude of 3000-6000 km. A combined analysis of the optical
  and particle data showed that the FAB component (1) was present for
  at least 1 min, (2) precipitated in spatial scales of ~10 km and (3)
  carried a number flux comparable to that of the overlying isotropic
  population. Bulk plasma parameters calculated in the vicinity of the
  fading arcs revealed an inverse relationship between parallel potential
  drop and number flux carried by the field-aligned population.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence for an extended reconnection line at the dayside
    magnetopause
Authors: Phan, T. D.; Freeman, M. P.; Kistler, L. M.; Klecker, B.;
   Haerendel, G.; Paschmann, G.; Sonnerup, B. U. Ö.; Baumjohann, W.;
   Bavassano-Cattaneo, M. B.; Carlson, C. W.; DiLellis, A. M.; Fornacon,
   K. -H.; Frank, L. A.; Fujimoto, M.; Georgescu, E.; Kokubun, S.;
   Moebius, E.; Mukai, T.; Paterson, W. R.; Reme, H.
2001EP&S...53..619P    Altcode:
  We report in-situ detection by two spacecraft of oppositely directed
  jets of plasma emanating from a magnetic reconnection site at the
  Earth's dayside magnetopause, confirming a key element inherent in all
  reconnection scenarios. The dual-spacecraft (Equator-S and Geotail)
  observations at the flank magnetopause, together with SuperDARNHalley
  radar observations of the subsolar cusp region, reveal the presence
  of a rather stable and extended reconnection line which lies along the
  equatorial magnetopause. These observations were made under persistent
  southward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) conditions, implying
  that under these conditions the reconnection sites are determined by
  the large-scale interactions between the solar wind magnetic field
  and the dayside magnetosphere, rather than by local conditions at
  the magnetopause. Control by local conditionswould result in patchy
  reconnection, distributed in a less well-organized fashion over the
  magnetopause surface.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Inter-comparison of Electric Fields measured by the Electron
    Drift Instrument (EDI) and the Electric Field and Waves Instrument
    (EFW ) on the CLUSTER Spacecraft
Authors: Torbert, R. B.; Paschmann, G.; Quinn, J.; Mozer, F. S.;
   Kistler, L.; Mouikis, C.; Haerendel, G.; Puhl-Quinn, P.; Andre, M.;
   Gustafsson, G.; Vaith, H.; Foerster, M.; Georgescu, E.; McIlwain,
   C.; Kerr, S.; kletzing, C.; Matsui, H.; Lindqvist, P.; Pedersen, A.;
   Fillius, W.
2001AGUSM..SM21B02T    Altcode:
  On CLUSTER, electric fields are measured by the double-probe technique
  (EFW) and by the Electron Drift Instrument (EDI). EFW measures the
  potential difference between spherical probes spinning in a plane,
  and computes the two components of the field in that spin plane. EDI
  measures the drift-step vector, which is the displacement of electron
  orbits after one gyro-period, and computes the two components of the
  field in the plane perpendicular to the magnetic field. Comparison of
  the field along the axis which is common to these two planes, shows
  very good agreement in many geophysical regions. Combining the two
  measurements yields a fully three-dimensional electric field measurement
  which we use to determine the electric fields in several interesting
  geophysical events seen in the early data from CLUSTER. These electric
  field data will be used also to compare with particle flow data in
  these events.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral acceleration in astrophysical plasmas
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2001PhPl....8.2365H    Altcode:
  The essentials of the auroral acceleration process are summarized,
  and a simple set of relations is derived which enables the analysis
  of parallel potential drops and related parameters in relevant
  astrophysical systems. The main condition for the occurrence of such
  potential drops is the existence of intense field-aligned currents
  driven by forces in the outer, weak magnetic fields of an astrophysical
  object. In the strong fields near the object the currents may reach
  a critical limit where the mirror force or current-driven anomalous
  resistivity require the setup of parallel potential drops for the
  maintenance of current continuity. Analysis of three candidate systems,
  solar flares, cataclysmic variables and accreting neutron stars,
  reveals the possibility of fast and efficient production of highly
  relativistic electrons manifesting themselves by gamma ray emission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Initial Results from the Cluster Electron Drift Instrument
Authors: Quinn, J.; Paschmann, G.; Torbert, R.; McIlwain, C.;
   Haerendel, G.; Vaith, H.; Puhl-Quinn, P.; Foerster, M.; Georgescu,
   E.; Kletzing, C.; Baumjohann, W.; Whipple, E.; Frey, S.; Kerr, S.;
   Fillius, W.
2001AGUSM..SM21B01Q    Altcode:
  We present an overview of initial results from the electron drift
  instrument (EDI) on the Cluster mission. EDI measures the local electron
  drift velocity by firing two weak electron-beams perpendicular to
  the magnetic field, and detecting their return after one or more gyro
  orbits. Depending on the magnitudes of the drift velocity and magnetic
  field, the measurement uses either a time-of-flight or "triangulation"
  technique to deduce the drift velocity. EDI inherently measures both
  components of the drift velocity in the plane perpendicular to the
  magnetic field, indpendent of the orientation of the spacecraft
  spin-axis. The measured drift velocity, from which we deduce the
  electric field, is usually dominated by the ExB drift. However EDI
  uses two different beam energies to identify the grad-B contribution
  to the drift.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Compressional Pc5 type pulsations in the morningside plasma
    sheet
Authors: Vaivads, A.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.; Nakamura, R.;
   Kucharek, H.; Klecker, B.; Lessard, M. R.
2001AnGeo..19..311V    Altcode:
  We study compressional pulsations in Pc5 frequency range observed in
  the dawn-side at distances of about 10 RE , close to the magnetic
  equator. We use data obtained during two events of conjunctions
  between Equator-S and Geotail: 1000 1700 UT on 9 March 1998,
  and 0200 0600 UT on 25 April 1998. In both events, pulsations are
  observed after substorm activity. The pulsations are antisymmetric
  with respect to the equatorial plane (even mode), and move eastward
  with phase velocity close to plasma velocity. The pulsations tend to
  be pressure balanced. We also discuss possible generation mechanisms
  of the pulsations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The magnetopause at high time resolution: Structure and
    lower-hybrid waves
Authors: Lucek, E. A.; Cargill, P.; Dunlop, M. W.; Kistler, L. M.;
   Balogh, A.; Baumjohann, W.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Georgescu, E.;
   Haerendel, G.
2001GeoRL..28..681L    Altcode:
  Equator-S made many magnetopause crossings between 06 00 and 10 40 LT,
  taking magnetic field data at 64 or 128 vectors/s. This allows structure
  within the shortest crossings to be examined, and examples having an
  exceptionally smooth ramp in |B| are presented. These crossings show no
  significant structure at sub-kilometre scales. Strong electromagnetic
  wave activity did not occur within the ramp, although some crossings
  have extremely low amplitude compressional waves in part of the
  field ramp close to the magnetosphere, with frequencies close to the
  lower hybrid frequency. These initial results suggest that physical
  processes on sub-km scales play no role in determining the structure
  of the current layer.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The UV aurora and ionospheric flows during flux transfer events
Authors: Neudegg, D. A.; Cowley, S. W. H.; McWilliams, K. A.; Lester,
   M.; Yeoman, T. K.; Sigwarth, J.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.;
   Auster, U.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Georgescu, E.
2001AnGeo..19..179N    Altcode:
  Far Ultra Violet (FUV) signatures in the polar ionosphere during a
  period of magnetopause reconnection are compared with ionospheric
  flows measured in the cusp ‘throat’ and dusk cell by the CUTLASS
  Hankasalmi HF radar. Regions of peak FUV emission in the 130.4 nm
  and 135.6 nm range, observed by the Polar spacecraft’s VIS Earth
  Camera, consistently lie at the turning point of the flows from the
  dusk cell, poleward into the throat, and at the equatorward edge of
  the region of high and varied radar spectral-width associated with
  the cusp. The Equator-S spacecraft was near the magnetopause at the
  time of the ionospheric observations and geomagnetically conjugate
  with the region of ionosphere observed by the radar. Flux transfer
  events (FTEs), suggestive of bursty reconnection between the IMF and
  geomagnetic fields, were observed by Equator-S prior to and during
  the periods of high FUV emission. Enhanced poleward ionospheric flow
  velocities in the polar cusp region, previously shown to be associated
  with bursty reconnection, consistently lie poleward of the enhanced
  FUV optical feature. The enhanced optical feature is consistent with
  the expected position of the largest upward region 1 field-aligned
  current, associated with electron precipitation, on the dusk edge of the
  merging gap. The optical feature moves duskward and equatorward during
  the course of the reconnection sequence, consistent with expansion
  of the merging line and the polar cap with newly added open magnetic
  flux by the FTEs. The DMSP F14 spacecraft passed through the enhanced
  FUV region and measured strong, structured electron precipitation far
  greater than in the adjacent regions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Interplanetary Shocks, Magnetopause Boundary Layers and
Dayside Auroras: The Importance of a Very Small Magnetospheric Region
Authors: Tsurutani, B. T.; Zhou, X. -Y.; Vasyliunas, V. M.; Haerendel,
   G.; Arballo, J. K.; Lakhina, G. S.
2001SGeo...22..101T    Altcode:
  Dayside near-polar auroral brightenings occur when interplanetary shocks
  impinge upon the Earth”s magnetosphere. The aurora first brightens near
  local noon and then propagates toward dawn and dusk along the auroral
  oval. The propagation speed of this wave of auroral light is 10 km s-1
  in the ionosphere. This speed is comparable to the solar wind speed
  along the outer magnetosphere. The fundamental shock-magnetospheric
  interaction occurs at the magnetopause and its boundary layer. Several
  physical mechanisms transferring energy from the solar wind directly
  to the magnetosphere and from the magnetosphere to the ionosphere
  are reviewed. The same physical processes can occur at other solar
  system magnetospheres. We use the Haerendel (1994) formulation to
  estimate the acceleration of energetic electrons to 50 keV in the
  Jovian magnetosphere/ionosphere. Auroral brightenings by shocks could
  be used as technique to discover planets in other stellar systems.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: IMF-B<SUB>y</SUB> controlled reconnection at the magnetopause
Authors: Marcucci, M. F.; Bavassano Cattaneo, M. B.; di Lellis, A. M.;
   Cerulli Irelli, P.; Kistler, L. M.; Phan, T. -D.; Haerendel, G.
2001MmSAI..72..614M    Altcode:
  We report evidence of a long lasting reconnection event during
  which the accelerated plasma flow direction changes in response to an
  interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) B<SUB>y</SUB> reversal, indicating
  a change in the reconnection site at the magnetopause. Our observations
  confirm that the dayside reconnection configuration is controlled by the
  IMF, as opposed to local control, but also stresses the importance of
  the IMF dawn-dusk component, in addition to the north-south component,
  in determining the global configuration of the reconnection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Stanislaw Grzedzielski — An appreciation
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2001CIBu..150...10H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: COSPAR colloquium on the interstellar environment of the
    heliosphere in honour of Stanislaw Grzedzielski on his retirement
Authors: Breitschwerdt, D.; Haerendel, G.
2001CIBu..150....8B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The probable chemical nature of interstellar dust particles
    detected by CIDA on Stardust
Authors: Kissel, J.; Krüger, F. R.; Silén, J.; Haerendel, G.
2001ohnf.conf..351K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Physics of Mass Loaded Plasmas
Authors: Szegö, Károly; Glassmeier, Karl-Heinz; Bingham, Robert;
   Bogdanov, Alexander; Fischer, Christian; Haerendel, Gerhard; Brinca,
   Armando; Cravens, Tom; Dubinin, Eduard; Sauer, Konrad; Fisk, Len;
   Gombosi, Tamas; Schwadron, Nathan; Isenberg, Phil; Lee, Martin;
   Mazelle, Christian; Möbius, Eberhard; Motschmann, Uwe; Shapiro,
   Vitali D.; Tsurutani, Bruce; Zank, Gary
2000SSRv...94..429S    Altcode:
  In space plasmas the phenomenon of mass loading is common. Comets are
  one of the most evident objects where mass loading controls to a large
  extent the structure and dynamics of its plasma environment. New charged
  material is implanted to the fast streaming solar wind by planets,
  moons, other solar system objects, and even by the interstellar neutral
  gas flowing through our solar system. In this review we summarize both
  the current observations and the relevant theoretical approaches. First
  we survey the MHD methods, starting with a discussion how mass loading
  affects subsonic and supersonic gasdynamics flows, continuing this
  with single and multi-fluid MHD approaches to describe the flow when
  mass, momentum and energy is added, and we finish this section by
  the description of mass loaded shocks. Next we consider the kinetic
  approach to the same problem, discussing wave excitations, pitch angle
  and energy scattering in linear and quasi-linear approximations. The
  different descriptions differ in assumptions and conclusions; we point
  out the differences, but it is beyond the scope of the paper to resolve
  all the conflicts. Applications of these techniques to comets, planets,
  artificial ion releases, and to the interplanetary neutrals are reviewed
  in the last section, where observations are also compared with models,
  including hybrid simulations as well. We conclude the paper with a
  summary of the most important open, yet unsolved questions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence for interplanetary magnetic field B<SUB>y</SUB>
    controlled large-scale reconnection at the dayside magnetopause
Authors: Marcucci, M. F.; Cattaneo, M. B. Bavassano; Di Lellis,
   A. M.; Irelli, P. Cerulli; Kistler, L. M.; Phan, T. -D.; Haerendel,
   G.; Klecker, B.; Paschmann, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Möbius, E.; Popecki,
   M. A.; Sauvaud, J. A.; Rème, H.; Korth, A.; Eliasson, L.; Carlson,
   C. W.; McCarthy, M.; Parks, G. K.
2000JGR...10527497M    Altcode:
  We report evidence of a long-lasting reconnection event during
  which the accelerated plasma flow direction changes in response to an
  interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) B<SUB>y</SUB> reversal, indicating
  a change in the reconnection site location. The observations were made
  by Equator-S on the dawn flank of the magnetopause and consist of a
  large number of plasma jets detected mostly within magnetospheric flux
  transfer events. The plasma jets were found in quantitative agreement
  with the theoretical predictions for reconnection. The reversal of
  the plasma flow direction in the jets following the reversal of the
  B<SUB>y</SUB> component not only confirms that the dayside reconnection
  configuration is controlled by the IMF, as opposed to local control,
  but also stresses the importance of the IMF dawn-dusk component,
  in addition to the north-south component, in determining the global
  configuration of the reconnection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First combined observations in the German-Argentinean solar
observatory: correlations in quiet and eruptive phenomena at the limb
Authors: Stenborg, G.; Bagalá, L. G.; Bauer, O. H.; Borda, R. F.;
   Francile, C.; Haerendel, G.; Rovira, M. G.; Schwenn, R.
2000JASTP..62.1553S    Altcode: 2000JATP...62.1553S
  This is a first report of combined observations form the solar
  instruments at the recently inaugurated German-Argentinean
  Solar-Observatory at El Leoncito, San Juan, Argentina. The /Hα
  telescope (HASTA) and the mirror coronagraph (MICA) daily image the
  solar disk and the inner solar corona respectively with high temporal
  and spatial resolution. The excellent weather conditions for solar
  studies of the Observatory, and its south equatorial location allow a
  complementary summer-condition data with respect to the majority of the
  other observatories, mainly located in the northern hemisphere. In this
  paper, we present four events in order to study possible correlations
  between observations taken by both telescopes. Since each instrument
  records data in quite different temperature regimes, correlation between
  both set of data appears when the phenomena span a broad range of
  temperatures. This is explicitly shown for two of the four set of data
  presented here. On the other hand, the four cases are good examples
  of the contributions the two instruments can provide to the better
  understanding of the mechanisms at work in the inner solar atmosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ICPP: Auroral Acceleration in Astrophysical Plasmas
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
2000APS..DPPGI2006H    Altcode:
  The acceleration of electrons in astrophysical systems, such as
  supernova remnants, is still an enigma. Although the presence of
  highly relativistic electrons manifests itself through synchrotron
  or inverse Compton radiation, it remains unclear how they can reach
  Lorentz factors of 2000 above which they can be efficiently accelerated
  in shock waves. Various proposals have been made how to overcome the
  so-called injection problem. In view of this lack of understanding,
  it is surprising how little attention has been paid to the auroral
  acceleration process in the wider astrophysical context. By summarising
  the basic ingredients of this process and casting them into simply
  applicable relations, it will be shown how field-aligned potential
  drops may be set up in the environment of magnetised stars. This can
  make them efficient accelerators of highly relativistic electrons
  manifesting themselves as gamma-ray sources. Particular attention
  will be given to field-aligned particle acceleration in solar flares,
  which appears to be the nearest realisation of the auroral process
  operating in a hot stellar environment.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Compressional Pc5 pulsations as sloshing in the plasma sheet
Authors: Vaivads, A.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Nakamura, R.;
   Kucharek, H.; Georgescu, E.; Klecker, B.; Kistler, L. M.
2000JGR...10523287V    Altcode:
  In the morningside plasma sheet close to the equatorial plane,
  satellites often observe magnetic field amplitude variations on
  timescales of several minutes (Pc5 range). Here we present an event
  study which shows that in some cases these variations can be a result
  of magnetospheric regions with different magnetic field amplitudes
  sloshing back and forth past the satellite. The sloshing is caused by
  toroidal Alfvén oscillations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MHD effects triggered by beams of charged particles in solar
    magnetic tubes and their possible relation to plasma heating during
    solar flares.
Authors: Khodachenko, M. L.; Haerendel, G.; Rieger, E.
2000BAAS...32R.821K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MHD Effects Triggered by Beams of Charged Particles in Solar
    Magnetic Tubes and Their Possible Relation to Plasma Heating during
    Solar Flares
Authors: Khodachenko, M. L.; Haerendel, G.; Rieger, E.
2000SPD....31.0256K    Altcode:
  MHD reaction of plasma on the low solar atmosphere to a changing
  current system of a flaring magnetic tube, containing a beam of fast
  non-thermal electrons, is studied. We estimate locally the disturbances
  of a current system of magnetic tube when the beam is injected into
  it, using the classical idea of a return current. We note that any
  changes of current density in magnetic tube change the Joule heating
  and disturb thermodynamical equilibrium of the tube. Heating of
  plasma destroys as well the force balance and starts the process of
  a complex dynamics of the whole plasma-magnetic structure. Impulsive
  character of a beam injection causes two natural stages of dynamical
  behavior of the tube. In the first one, characterized by the presence
  of a beam, the preliminary equilibrium state of the magnetic tube is
  disturbed and the complex dynamics of plasma starts in the region of
  beam propagation, during the second stage, when injection of the beam
  is already over, plasma and magnetic field continue to evolve from
  the disturbed state and gradually relax to the equilibrium state. The
  dynamical behavior of a magnetic tube is studied on the basis of known
  self-similar solutions of plasma MHD. M.L.Khodachenko is grateful to
  the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft for the research fellowship supporting
  his work in 1999-2001 years.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetospheric lion roars
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Georgescu, E.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Auster,
   H. U.; Treumann, R. A.; Haerendel, G.
2000AnGeo..18..406B    Altcode:
  The Equator-S magnetometer is very sensitive and has a sampling
  rate normally of 128 Hz. The high sampling rate for the first time
  allows detection of ELF waves between the ion cyclotron and the
  lower hybrid frequencies in the equatorial dawnside magnetosphere. The
  characteristics of these waves are virtually identical to the lion roars
  typically seen at the bottom of the magnetic troughs of magnetosheath
  mirror waves. The magnetospheric lion roars are near-monochromatic
  packets of electron whistler waves lasting for a few wave cycles only,
  typically 0.2 s. They are right-hand circularly polarized waves with
  typical amplitudes of 0.5 nT at around one tenth of the electron
  gyrofrequency. The cone angle between wave vector and ambient field
  is nearly always smaller than 1°.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A survey of magnetopause FTEs and associated flow bursts in
    the polar ionosphere
Authors: Neudegg, D. A.; Cowley, S. W. H.; Milan, S. E.; Yeoman, T. K.;
   Lester, M.; Provan, G.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Nikutowski,
   B.; Büchner, J.; Auster, U.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Georgescu, E.
2000AnGeo..18..416N    Altcode:
  Using the Equator-S spacecraft and SuperDARN HF radars an extensive
  survey of bursty reconnection at the magnetopause and associated
  flows in the polar ionosphere has been conducted. Flux transfer
  event (FTE) signatures were identified in the Equator-S magnetometer
  data during periods of magnetopause contact in January and February
  1998. Assuming the effects of the FTEs propagate to the polar ionosphere
  as geomagnetic field-aligned-currents and associated Alfvén-waves,
  appropriate field mappings to the fields-of-view of SuperDARN radars
  were performed. The radars observed discrete ionospheric flow channel
  events (FCEs) of the type previously assumed to be related to pulse
  reconnection. Such FCEs were associated with sim80% of the FTEs and the
  two signatures are shown to be statistically associated with greater
  than 99% confidence. Exemplary case studies highlight the nature of the
  ionospheric flows and their relation to the high latitude convection
  pattern, the association methodology, and the problems caused by
  instrument limitations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Extended magnetic reconnection at the Earth's magnetopause
    from detection of bi-directional jets
Authors: Phan, T. D.; Kistler, L. M.; Klecker, B.; Haerendel, G.;
   Paschmann, G.; Sonnerup, B. U. Ö.; Baumjohann, W.; Bavassano-Cattaneo,
   M. B.; Carlson, C. W.; DiLellis, A. M.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Frank,
   L. A.; Fujimoto, M.; Georgescu, E.; Kokubun, S.; Moebius, E.; Mukai,
   T.; Øieroset, M.; Paterson, W. R.; Reme, H.
2000Natur.404..848P    Altcode:
  Magnetic reconnection is a process that converts magnetic energy into
  bi-directional plasma jets; it is believed to be the dominant process by
  which solar-wind energy enters the Earth's magnetosphere. This energy
  is subsequently dissipated by magnetic storms and aurorae. Previous
  single-spacecraft observations revealed only single jets at the
  magnetopause-while the existence of a counter-streaming jet was
  implicitly assumed, no experimental confirmation was available. Here we
  report in situ two-spacecraft observations of bi-directional jets at the
  magnetopause, finding evidence for a stable and extended reconnection
  line; the latter implies substantial entry of the solar wind into
  the magnetosphere. We conclude that reconnection is determined by
  large-scale interactions between the solar wind and the magnetosphere,
  rather than by local conditions at the magnetopause.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High- and low-altitude observations of adiabatic parameters
    associated with auroral electron acceleration
Authors: Shiokawa, K.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.; Fukunishi, H.
2000JGR...105.2541S    Altcode:
  Electron density and temperature, adiabatic thermal current,
  and field-aligned conductivity have been estimated on the basis
  of observations by the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program
  (DMSP) satellites above the auroral oval and from measurement by the
  Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers/Ion Release Module
  (IRM) satellite in the near-Earth plasma sheet. We found that the
  estimated densities are comparable between these two satellites,
  while the temperatures obtained from an accelerated Maxwellian
  fitting procedure used on the DMSP spectra are far lower than those
  measured by IRM in the near-Earth plasma sheet. From this temperature
  discrepancy we conclude that the accelerated electrons do not come from
  the equatorial plane of the magnetosphere but from the region just
  above the field-aligned potential difference at an altitude of a few
  R<SUB>E</SUB>. The DMSP data show that a large field-aligned potential
  difference, which accelerates auroral electrons downward, is formed in
  the region with low field-aligned conductivity. The IRM data show that
  the field-aligned conductivity decreases with increasing X<SUB>GSM</SUB>
  distance, increasing AE index, and after earthward high-speed flow
  passage. The adiabatic thermal current estimated from the IRM data is
  found to be not enough to supply typical auroral current. Though the
  mechanism that produces field-aligned potential difference has not been
  identified yet, these results suggest that field-aligned potential
  difference is formed to keep the balance between the field-aligned
  current generated by magnetospheric processes and the current carried
  away from the generator region by accelerated electrons.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EQUATOR-S: The Mission and First Coordinated Measurements
    with Geotail
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2000AdSpR..25.1277H    Altcode:
  An overview of the origin of the EQUATOR-S mission, the spacecraft
  development and the mission history is given. In spite of its short
  operational life of only five months, the major goals were fulfilled,
  except that its contribution to IASTP science is restricted to the
  morning sector of the outer magnetosphere. A few data sets illustrating
  the satellite's capability are presented.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Outstanding Issues in Understanding the Dynamics of the Inner
    Plasma Sheet and Ring Current During Storms and Substorms
Authors: Haerendel, G.
2000AdSpR..25.2379H    Altcode:
  The paper deals with five selected issues of the dynamical coupling of
  the near-Earth plasma sheet and magnetosphere, (1) substorm initiation,
  (2) dipolarization, (3) pressure release of the outer magnetosphere
  via the auroral energy conversion process, (4) magnetization of the
  very high beta plasma assembling at the inner edge of the tail, and
  (5) penetration of energetic particles into the ring current below L
  ≅ 4. One outstanding and strongly debated subject is not discussed
  here, the origin of the substorm current wedge. The main conclusions
  (or personal preferences) are: (1) the substorm is initiated by
  formation of a near-Earth neutral line; (2) dipolarization occurs
  through magnetic flux transport by the earthward reconnection flow and
  not by current diffusion; (3) the auroral energy conversion process, the
  “auroral pressure valve”, contributes substantially to the pressure
  release during the substorms; (4) high beta (&gt; 10) plasma breaks
  up into smaller scale blobs under slow magnetization; and (5) deep
  and prolonged penetration of hot plasma sheet plasma into the middle
  magnetosphere produces currents and electric fields which lead to the
  growth of the storm-time ring current

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Testing electric field models using ring current ion energy
    spectra from the Equator-S ion composition (ESIC) instrument
Authors: Kistler, L. M.; Klecker, B.; Jordanova, V. K.; Möbius, E.;
   Popecki, M. A.; Patel, D.; Sauvaud, J. A.; Rème, H.; di Lellis,
   A. M.; Korth, A.; McCarthy, M.; Cerulli, R.; Bavassano Cattaneo,
   M. B.; Eliasson, L.; Carlson, C. W.; Parks, G. K.; Paschmann, G.;
   Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.
1999AnGeo..17.1611K    Altcode:
  During the main and early recovery phase of a geomagnetic storm on
  February 18, 1998, the Equator-S ion composition instrument (ESIC)
  observed spectral features which typically represent the differences
  in loss along the drift path in the energy range (5-15 keV/e) where
  the drift changes from being E × B dominated to being gradient and
  curvature drift dominated. We compare the expected energy spectra
  modeled using a Volland-Stern electric field and a Weimer electric
  field, assuming charge exchange along the drift path, with the observed
  energy spectra for H+ and O+. We find that using the Weimer electric
  field gives much better agreement with the spectral features, and with
  the observed losses. Neither model, however, accurately predicts the
  energies of the observed minima.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: CDS/SOHO Observations of Abundance Variations and
    Doppler-Shifts in Active Regions NOAA-8208
Authors: Rank, G.; Czaykowska, A.; Bagalá, L. G.; Haerendel, G.
1999ESASP.448..349R    Altcode: 1999ESPM....9..349R; 1999mfsp.conf..349R
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Introduction: The Equator-S mission
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Torbert, R. B.; Höfner, H.
1999AnGeo..17.1499H    Altcode:
  In spite of its short operational life of only five months, the
  major goals of the Equator-S mission were fulfilled, except that its
  contribution to the ISTP science is restricted to the morning sector
  of the outer magnetosphere. A set of twelve papers following this
  introduction is a first documentation of the achievements. They span
  from the successful testing and operation of the most advanced and
  complex way of measuring electric fields in a hot plasma environment
  by means of electron beams, to various investigations at or near the
  equatorial magnetopause and in the plasma sheet.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetopause boundary structure deduced from the high-time
    resolution particle experiment on the Equator-S spacecraft
Authors: Parks, G. K.; Datta, S.; McCarthy, M.; Lin, R. P.; Reme,
   H.; Sauvaud, J. A.; Sanderson, T.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.;
   Torkar, K.
1999AnGeo..17.1574P    Altcode:
  An electrostatic analyser (ESA) onboard the Equator-S spacecraft
  operating in coordination with a potential control device (PCD) has
  obtained the first accurate electron energy spectrum with energies
  approx7 eV-100 eV in the vicinity of the magnetopause. On 8 January,
  1998, a solar wind pressure increase pushed the magnetopause inward,
  leaving the Equator-S spacecraft in the magnetosheath. On the return
  into the magnetosphere approximately 80 min later, the magnetopause
  was observed by the ESA and the solid state telescopes (the SSTs
  detected electrons and ions with energies approx20-300 keV). The
  high time resolution (3 s) data from ESA and SST show the boundary
  region contains of multiple plasma sources that appear to evolve in
  space and time. We show that electrons with energies approx7 eV-100 eV
  permeate the outer regions of the magnetosphere, from the magnetopause
  to approx6Re. Pitch-angle distributions of approx20-300 keV electrons
  show the electrons travel in both directions along the magnetic field
  with a peak at 90176 indicating a trapped configuration. The IMF during
  this interval was dominated by Bx and By components with a small Bz.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EDI electron time-of-flight measurements on Equator-S
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Sckopke, N.; Vaith, H.; Quinn, J. M.; Bauer,
   O. H.; Baumjohann, W.; Fillius, W.; Haerendel, G.; Kerr, S. S.;
   Kletzing, C. A.; Lynch, K.; McIlwain, C. E.; Torbert, R. B.; Whipple,
   E. C.
1999AnGeo..17.1513P    Altcode:
  We present the first electron time-of-flight measurements obtained with
  the Electron Drift Instrument (EDI) on Equator-S. These measurements are
  made possible by amplitude-modulation and coding of the emitted electron
  beams and correlation with the signal from the returning electrons. The
  purpose of the time-of-flight measurements is twofold. First, they
  provide the drift velocity, and thus the electric field, when the
  distance the electrons drift in a gyro period becomes sufficiently
  large. Second, they provide the gyro time of the electrons emitted by
  the instrument, and thus the magnitude of the ambient magnetic field,
  allowing in-flight calibration of the flux-gate magnetometer with high
  precision. Results of both applications are discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Waveform and packet structure of lion roars
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Treumann, R. A.; Georgescu, E.; Haerendel,
   G.; Fornacon, K. -H.; Auster, U.
1999AnGeo..17.1528B    Altcode:
  The Equator-S magnetometer is very sensitive and has a sampling
  rate of normally 128 Hz. The high sampling rate allows for the first
  time fluxgate magnetometer measurements of ELF waves between the ion
  cyclotron and the lower hybrid frequencies in the equatorial dayside
  magnetosheath. The so-called lion roars, typically seen by the Equator-S
  magnetometer at the bottom of the magnetic troughs of magnetosheath
  mirror waves, are near-monochromatic packets of electron whistler
  waves lasting for a few wave cycles only, typically 0.25 s. They are
  right-hand circularly polarized waves with typical amplitudes of 0.5-1
  nT at around one tenth of the electron gyrofrequency. The cone angle
  between wave vector and ambient field is usually smaller than 1.5°.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dynamics and local boundary properties of the dawn-side
    magnetopause under conditions observed by Equator-S
Authors: Dunlop, M. W.; Balogh, A.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.;
   Fornacon, K. -H.; Georgescu, E.; Nakamura, R.; Kokubin, S.
1999AnGeo..17.1535D    Altcode:
  Magnetic field measurements, taken by the magnetometer experiment (MAM)
  on board the German Equator-S spacecraft, have been used to identify and
  categorise 131 crossings of the dawn-side magnetopause at low latitude,
  providing unusual, long duration coverage of the adjacent magnetospheric
  regions and near magnetosheath. The crossings occurred on 31 orbits,
  providing unbiased coverage over the full range of local magnetic
  shear from 06:00 to 10:40 LT. Apogee extent places the spacecraft in
  conditions associated with intermediate, rather than low, solar wind
  dynamic pressure, as it processes into the flank region. The apogee
  of the spacecraft remains close to the magnetopause for mean solar
  wind pressure. The occurrence of the magnetopause encounters are
  summarised and are found to compare well with predicted boundary
  location, where solar wind conditions are known. Most scale with
  solar wind pressure. Magnetopause shape is also documented and we
  find that the magnetopause orientation is consistently sunward of a
  model boundary and is not accounted for by IMF or local magnetic shear
  conditions. A number of well-established crossings, particularly those
  at high magnetic shear, or exhibiting unusually high-pressure states,
  were observed and have been analysed for their boundary characteristics
  and some details of their boundary and near magnetosheath properties
  are discussed. Of particular note are the occurrence of mirror-like
  signatures in the adjacent magnetosheath during a significant fraction
  of the encounters and a high number of multiple crossings over a long
  time period. The latter is facilitated by the spacecraft orbit which
  is designed to remain in the near magnetosheath for average solar wind
  pressure. For most encounters, a well-ordered, tangential (draped)
  magnetosheath field is observed and there is little evidence of large
  deviations in local boundary orientations. Two passes corresponding to
  close conjunctions of the Geotail spacecraft are analysed to confirm
  boundary orientation and motion. These further show evidence of an
  anti-sunward moving depression on the magnetopause (which is much
  smaller at Equator-S). The Tsyganenko model field is used routinely to
  assist in categorising the crossings and some comparison of models is
  carried out. We note that typically the T87 model fits the data better
  than the T89 model during conditions of low to intermediate KP index
  near the magnetopause and also near the dawn-side tail current sheet
  in the dawnside region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: EDI convection measurements at 5-6 R E in the post-midnight
    region
Authors: Quinn, J. M.; Paschmann, G.; Sckopke, N.; Jordanova, V. K.;
   Vaith, H.; Bauer, O. H.; Baumjohann, W.; Fillius, W.; Haerendel, G.;
   Kerr, S. S.; Kletzing, C. A.; Lynch, K.; McIlwain, C. E.; Torbert,
   R. B.; Whipple, E. C.
1999AnGeo..17.1503Q    Altcode:
  We present the first triangulation measurements of electric fields with
  the electron drift instrument (EDI) on Equator-S. We show results from
  five high-data-rate passes of the satellite through the near-midnight
  equatorial region, at geocentric distances of approximately 5-6 RE,
  during geomagnetically quiet conditions. In a co-rotating frame of
  reference, the measured electric fields have magnitudes of a few tenths
  of mV/m, with the E × B drift generally directed sunward but with
  large variations. Temporal variations of the electric field on time
  scales of several seconds to minutes are large compared to the average
  magnitude. Comparisons of the DC baseline of the EDI-measured electric
  fields with the mapped Weimer ionospheric model and the Rowland and
  Wygant CRRES measurements yield reasonable agreement.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Identification of magnetosheath mirror modes in Equator-S
    magnetic field data
Authors: Lucek, E. A.; Dunlop, M. W.; Balogh, A.; Cargill, P.;
   Baumjohann, W.; Georgescu, E.; Haerendel, G.; Fornacon, K. -H.
1999AnGeo..17.1560L    Altcode:
  Between December 1997 and March 1998 Equator-S made a number of
  excursions into the dawn-side magnetosheath, over a range of local times
  between 6:00 and 10:40 LT. Clear mirror-like structures, characterised
  by compressive fluctuations in |B| on occasion lasting for up to 5 h,
  were observed during a significant fraction of these orbits. During
  most of these passes the satellite appeared to remain close to the
  magnetopause (within 1-2 Re), during sustained compressions of the
  magnetosphere, and so the characteristics of the mirror structures
  are used as a diagnostic of magnetosheath structure close to the
  magnetopause during these orbits. It is found that in the majority of
  cases mirror-like activity persists, undamped, to within a few minutes
  of the magnetopause, with no observable ramp in |B|, irrespective
  of the magnetic shear across the boundary. This suggests that any
  plasma depletion layer is typically of narrow extent or absent at
  the location of the satellite, at least during the subset of orbits
  containing strong magnetosheath mirror-mode signatures. Power spectra
  for the mirror signatures show predominately field aligned power, a
  well defined shoulder at around 3-10 × 10-2 Hz and decreasing power at
  higher frequencies. On occasions the fluctuations are more sinusoidal,
  leading to peaked spectra instead of a shoulder. In all cases mirror
  structures are found to lie approximately parallel to the observed
  magnetopause boundary. There is some indication that the amplitude
  of the compressional fluctuations tends to be greater closer to the
  magnetopause. This has not been previously reported in the Earth's
  magnetosphere, but has been suggested in the case of other planets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-beta plasma blobs in the morningside plasma sheet
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Georgescu, E.; Nakamura, R.;
   Kistler, L. M.; Klecker, B.; Kucharek, H.; Vaivads, A.; Mukai, T.;
   Kokubun, S.
1999AnGeo..17.1592H    Altcode:
  Equator-S frequently encountered, i.e. on 30% of the orbits between
  1 March and 17 April 1998, strong variations of the magnetic field
  strength of typically 5-15-min duration outside about 9RE during the
  late-night/early-morning hours. Very high-plasma beta values were
  found, varying between 1 and 10 or more. Close conjunctions between
  Equator-S and Geotail revealed the spatial structure of these plasma
  blobs and their lifetime. They are typically 5-10° wide in longitude
  and have an antisymmetric plasma or magnetic pressure distribution with
  respect to the equator, while being altogether low-latitude phenomena
  (&lt; 15°). They drift slowly sunward, exchange plasma across the
  equator and have a lifetime of at least 15-30 min. While their spatial
  structure may be due to some sort of mirror instability, little is
  known about the origin of the high-beta plasma. It is speculated that
  the morningside boundary layer somewhat further tailward may be the
  source of this plasma. This would be consistent with the preference of
  the plasma blobs to occur during quiet conditions, although they are
  also found during substorm periods. The relation to auroral phenomena
  in the morningside oval is uncertain. The energy deposition may be
  mostly too weak to generate a visible signature. However, patchy aurora
  remains a candidate for more disturbed periods.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The magnetic field experiment onboard Equator-S and its
    scientific possibilities
Authors: Fornacon, K. -H.; Auster, H. U.; Georgescu, E.; Baumjohann,
   W.; Glassmeier, K. -H.; Haerendel, G.; Rustenbach, J.; Dunlop, M.
1999AnGeo..17.1521F    Altcode:
  The special feature of the ringcore fluxgate magnetometer on
  Equator-S is the high time and field resolution. The scientific
  aim of the experiment is the investigation of waves in the 10-100
  picotesla range with a time resolution up to 64 Hz. The instrument
  characteristics and the influence of the spacecraft on the magnetic
  field measurement will be discussed. The work shows that the applied
  pre- and inflight calibration techniques are sufficient to suppress
  spacecraft interferences. The offset in spin axis direction was
  determined for the first time with an independent field measurement
  by the Equator-S Electron Drift Instrument. The data presented gives
  an impression of the accuracy of the measurement.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Multi-wavelength Observations of the September 30, 1998 Event
    at the German-Argentinian Solar Observatory
Authors: Bagalá, L. G.; Stenborg, G.; Schwenn, R.; Bauer, O. H.;
   Fernández Borda, R.; Haerendel, G.
1999ESASP.448..959B    Altcode: 1999mfsp.conf..959B; 1999ESPM....9..959B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Substorm observations in the early morning sector with
    Equator-S and Geotail
Authors: Nakamura, R.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Vaivads, A.;
   Kucharek, H.; Klecker, B.; Georgescu, E.; Birn, J.; Kistler, L. M.;
   Mukai, T.; Kokubun, S.; Eglitis, P.; Frank, L. A.; Sigwarth, J. B.
1999AnGeo..17.1602N    Altcode:
  Data from Equator-S and Geotail are used to study the dynamics of the
  plasma sheet observed during a substorm with multiple intensifications
  on 25 April 1998, when both spacecraft were located in the early morning
  sector (03-04 MLT) at a radial distance of 10-11 RE. In association
  with the onset of a poleward expansion of the aurora and the westward
  electrojet in the premidnight and midnight sector, both satellites in
  the morning sector observed plasma sheet thinning and changes toward
  a more tail-like field configuration. During the subsequent poleward
  expansion in a wider local time sector (20-04 MLT), on the other
  hand, the magnetic field configuration at both satellites changed
  into a more dipolar configuration and both satellites encountered
  again the hot plasma sheet. High-speed plasma flows with velocities
  of up to 600 km/s and lasting 2-5 min were observed in the plasma
  sheet and near its boundary during this plasma sheet expansion. These
  high-speed flows included significant dawn-dusk flows and had a shear
  structure. They may have been produced by an induced electric field
  at the local dipolarization region and/or by an enhanced pressure
  gradient associated with the injection in the midnight plasma sheet.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The New Hα Solar Telescope at the German-Argentinian Solar
    Observatory
Authors: Bagalá, L. G.; Bauer, O. H.; Fernández Borda, R.; Francile,
   C.; Haerendel, G.; Rieger, R.; Rovira, M. G.
1999ESASP.448..469B    Altcode: 1999ESPM....9..469B; 1999mfsp.conf..469B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Abundance Variations and Flows in Plage Regions Observed
    with CDS/SOHO
Authors: Rank, G.; Bagalá, L. G.; Czaykowska, A.; Haerendel, G.
1999ESASP.446..561R    Altcode: 1999soho....8..561R
  We present results from CDS/SOHO observations of the spotless active
  region NOAA-8208, obtained on 28th April 1998 near disk center. MDI
  images show a bipolar magnetic configuration. The regions of enhanced
  He I emission correspond to the areas with strong magnetic flux and
  also with bright plage areas seen in Ca II and H-alpha images. A high
  correlation is found between intensity maps of the transition region
  lines He I (logTmax = 4.3), O III (logTmax = 5.0), and O V (logTmax =
  5.4). The line-of-sight velocities of He I reveal a strong downflow in
  the plage areas. Further, the line-of-sight velocities of He I, O III,
  and O V are well correlated, showing that the downflow pattern exists
  up to temperatures of about 0.25 MK. At higher temperatures (Mg VIII
  at logTmax = 5.8) this flow is not detected, suggesting that material
  streams into the plage region from sideways in the high transition
  region. Maps of the electron density in the transition region have been
  constructed from several line ratios yielding densities of about 9.0
  cm<SUP>-3</SUP> in the plage regions, about dex 0.5 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>
  higher compared to the surrounding. To study the spatial variation of
  the first ionization potential (FIP) effect, the abundance ratio has
  been mapped for the ion ratio MgVI/NeVI. The ratio is highly variable
  on spatial scales down to a few arcsec from photospheric values to
  enhancements of a factor of 10. The strongest FIP enhancements are not
  correlated with transition region line emission, but are found outside
  of the plage regions. Some areas of strong FIP enhancement appear
  stretched and elongated, suggesting that the material is confined in
  loop-like structures.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Flow braking and the substorm current wedge
Authors: Birn, J.; Hesse, M.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.;
   Shiokawa, K.
1999JGR...10419895B    Altcode:
  Recent models of magnetotail activity have associated the braking of
  earthward flow with dipolarization and the reduction and diversion
  of cross-tail current, that is, the signatures of the substorm
  current wedge. Estimates of the magnitude of the diverted current by
  Haerendel [1992] and Shiokawa et al. [1997, 1998] tend to be lower
  than results from computer simulations of magnetotail reconnection
  and tail collapse [Birn and Hesse, 1996], despite similar underlying
  models. An analysis of the differences between these estimates on
  the basis of the simulations gives a more refined picture of the
  diversion of perpendicular into parallel currents. The inertial currents
  considered by Haerendel [1992] and Shiokawa et al. [1997] contribute
  to the initial current reduction and diversion, but the dominant and
  more permanent contribution stems from the pressure gradient terms,
  which change in connection with the field collapse and distortion. The
  major effect results from pressure gradients in the z direction,
  rather than from the azimuthal gradients [Shiokawa et al., 1998],
  combined with changes in B<SUB>y</SUB> and B<SUB>x</SUB>. The reduction
  of the current density near the equatorial plane is associated with a
  reduction of the curvature drift which overcompensates changes of the
  magnetization current and of the gradient B drift current. In contrast
  to the inertial current effects, the pressure gradient effects persist
  even after the burst of earthward flow ends.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dawnside magnetopause observed by the Equator-S Magnetic
Field Experiment: Identification and survey of crossings
Authors: Dunlop, M. W.; Balogh, A.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.;
   Fornacon, K. -H.; Georgescu, E.
1999JGR...10417491D    Altcode:
  The German Equator-S spacecraft provided long-duration, low-latitude
  coverage of the dawnside magnetopause and adjacent magnetosheath. We
  document 131 magnetopause crossings from 31 orbits, giving coverage from
  0600 to 1040 LT and exhibiting a wide range of local magnetic shear. The
  Tsyganenko model field is used routinely to assist identification and
  in categorizing the crossings. The apogee of the spacecraft remains
  close to the magnetopause for mean solar wind pressure. Consequently,
  magnetosheath intervals often extending several hours are observed,
  many containing a high number of crossings. For most encounters, a
  well-ordered, tangential (draped) magnetosheath field is observed;
  30% containing extended intervals of strong mirror signatures. The
  occurrence of the crossings is summarized, and locations are found
  to compare well to predicted boundary positions using observed,
  upstream solar wind IMF and pressure values; some corresponding to
  unusually high solar wind ram pressure. Other crossing characteristics
  have also been analyzed, such as boundary normals. Although these
  are broadly consistent with fitted, model magnetopause orientations,
  they typically lie sunward of these, suggesting a blunter magnetopause
  shape in this region than predicated. No strong evidence is found of
  large deviations in local boundary orientations, possibly consistent
  with the highly draped magnetosheath field configuration.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Shear velocity profiles associated with auroral curls
Authors: Vogt, J.; Frey, H. U.; Haerendel, G.; Höfner, H.; Semeter,
   J. L.
1999JGR...10417277V    Altcode:
  Optical observations using high-resolution television cameras frequently
  show that auroral curls are associated with shear velocities in
  the apparent optical flow. The present study examines in detail
  one particular curl system event which happened to yield sufficient
  resolution to determine the fine structure of velocity and vorticity
  profiles by means of a new analysis technique. Those observations
  of curl system evolution are contrasted with large velocity shear
  events where small-scale quasiperiodic distortions were subject to
  sudden decay rather than development into vortices. The results are
  discussed in light of an electrostatic picture of auroral acceleration
  and the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability model. We suggest that the latter
  cannot fully explain the nonlinear phase of the observed curl system
  event and that curl models should take auroral acceleration processes
  into account.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Mirror mode structures observed in the dawn-side magnetosheath
    by Equator-S
Authors: Lucek, E. A.; Dunlop, M. W.; Balogh, A.; Cargill, P.;
   Baumjohann, W.; Georgescu, E.; Haerendel, G.; Fornacon, K. -H.
1999GeoRL..26.2159L    Altcode:
  The Equator-S satellite was ideally positioned to make magnetic
  field observations in the dawn-side magnetosheath, relatively close
  to the magnetopause. The magnetosheath data were particularly rich in
  compressional signatures, consistent with mirror mode structures, which
  occurred during ∼30% of orbits crossing into the magnetosheath. In
  most, although not all cases, strongly compressive signatures
  extended up to the magnetopause boundary, with no increase in the
  underlying magnetic field magnitude on the time scale of ten to thirty
  minutes. The proximity and character of mirror-like fluctuations near
  the magnetopause suggest that in the dawn-side magnetosheath the plasma
  depletion layer (PDL) is of narrower extent than is generally observed
  closer to the subsolar point, or is absent.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Age of NGC 6426, a Metal-poor Globular Cluster in the
    Galactic Halo
Authors: Hatzidimitriou, D.; Papadakis, I.; Croke, B. F. W.;
   Papamastorakis, I.; Paleologou, E. V.; Xanthopoulos, E.; Haerendel, G.
1999AJ....117.3059H    Altcode:
  We present B, V, R, and I photometry of the metal-poor globular
  cluster in the galactic halo, NGC 6426. The observations were
  performed using the 1.3 m Telescope at Skinakas Observatory in
  Crete. We derived the reddening of the cluster to be E(B-V)=0.39+/-0.02
  [E(V-I)=0.53+/-0.03]. The metal abundance of the cluster was estimated
  from the shape of the red giant branch following the techniques
  by Sarajedini and by Da Costa &amp; Armandroff. It was found to
  be [Fe/H]=-2.33+/-0.15 dex. The mean V magnitude of the RR Lyrae
  variables found in the cluster is 18.14+/-0.02 (based on a paper
  in preparation). The resulting distance modulus of the cluster is
  16.41+/-0.07. Finally, we derived the relative age of NGC 6426. Using
  the methodology of Harris et al., we found that NGC 6426 is marginally
  older than M92 (by ~=0.7 Gyr). Following the Chaboyer, Demarque, &amp;
  Sarajedini method we found NGC 6426 to have the same age as the mean
  metal-poor globular cluster of the galactic halo.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A flux transfer event observed at the magnetopause by the
    Equator-S spacecraft and in the ionosphere by the CUTLASS HF radar
Authors: Neudegg, D. A.; Yeoman, T. K.; Cowley, S. W. H.; Provan,
   G.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Auster, U.; Fornacon, K. -H.;
   Georgescu, E.; Owen, C. J.
1999AnGeo..17..707N    Altcode:
  Observations of a flux transfer event (FTE) have been made
  simultaneously by the Equator-S spacecraft near the dayside magnetopause
  whilst corresponding transient plasma flows were seen in the
  near-conjugate polar ionosphere by the CUTLASS Finland HF radar. Prior
  to the occurrence of the FTE, the magnetometer on the WIND spacecraft
  ~226 RE upstream of the Earth in the solar wind detected a southward
  turning of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) which is estimated to
  have reached the subsolar magnetopause ~77 min later. Shortly afterwards
  the Equator-S magnetometer observed a typical bipolar FTE signature in
  the magnetic field component normal to the magnetopause, just inside
  the magnetosphere. Almost simultaneously the CUTLASS Finland radar
  observed a strong transient flow in the F region plasma between 78°
  and 83° magnetic latitude, near the ionospheric region predicted to
  map along geomagnetic field lines to the spacecraft. The flow signature
  (and the data set as a whole) is found to be fully consistent with the
  view that the FTE was formed by a burst of magnetopause reconnection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MPE Jahresbericht 1998 / Annual report 1998.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1999mpja.book.....H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Origin and dynamics of thin auroral arcs
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1999AdSpR..23.1637H    Altcode:
  Thin auroral structures are discussed from the side of observations,
  basic auroral arc theory and the non-linear response of the topside
  ionosphere. The reported structures of widths down to ~ 100 m are likely
  to be embedded in broader luminous regions. Determination of their width
  depends sensitively on the imaging contrast. The basic theory of auroral
  arcs, which attributes the energy carried by the primary electrons to
  the conversion of electromagnetic energy via field-aligned potential
  drops above the topside ionosphere, is incapable of reconciling the
  observed energies and current densities with narrow widths. The lowest
  values it allows for lie near 5 km. It is suggested that cool plasma,
  eroded at the boundaries of propagating auroral acceleration regions,
  creates upwelling ion tongues of narrow widths which are the sites of
  additional potentials drops, energy conversion and shear flows. They
  may well underlie the formation of thin auroral substructures.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First ELF wave measurements with the Equator-S magnetometer
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.; Treumann, R. A.; Bauer,
   T. M.; Rustenbach, J.; Georgescu, E.; Auster, U.; Fornacon, K. H.;
   Glaßmeier, K. -H.; Lühr, H.; Büchner, J.; Nikutowski, B.; Balogh,
   A.; Cowley, S. W. H.
1999AdSpR..24...77B    Altcode:
  The magnetometer onboard the Equator-S satellite is very sensitive and
  has a high sampling rate of up to 128 Hz. These specifications allow
  for the first fluxgate magnetometer measurements of ELF waves between
  the ion cyclotron and the lower hybrid frequencies in the equatorial
  dayside magnetosheath. The so-called lion roars, typically seen by
  the Equator-S magnetometer at the bottom of the magnetic troughs of
  magnetosheath mirror waves, are near-monochromatic packets of electron
  whistler waves lasting for 0.2-1 sec. They are right-hand circularly
  polarized shear waves with typical amplitudes of 0.5-1 nT at frequencies
  of 15-40 Hz, i.e., around one tenth of the electron gyrofrequency.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Keynote address
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1999msrt.conf....3H    Altcode:
  This chapter discusses the importance of small and mini-satellites
  in space research. These tools have a role complementary to that
  of big observatories and space probes, adding flexibility, short
  lead-times, and an alternate means of procurement and of sharing
  responsibility. For many tasks in astronomy, solar system research,
  and Earth observations, big missions will be indispensable and,
  after careful analysis, may prove to be more cost effective than a
  number of small missions accomplishing the same work. The world has
  witnessed successful launches of important space projects, such as the
  National Aeronautics and Space Administration/European Space Agency
  (NASA/ESA) Cassini/Huygens mission to Saturn and its satellite Titan
  and the deployment of the Haruka space radio-telescope by Institute of
  Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS), the space segment of the MLBI
  Observatory. The Italian-Dutch Beppo-SAX satellite for X-ray astronomy
  detected the X-ray afterglow of gamma-ray bursts, combined with optical
  and radio data. It positively proved, after three decades of debate,
  that these enigmatic bursts originate at cosmological distances.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische
    Physik. Jahresbericht für 1998.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1999MitAG..82..269H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Keynote Address
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1999mart.conf....3H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A model for the reflection of Alfvén waves at the source
region of the Birkeland current system: The tau generator
Authors: Vogt, J.; Haerendel, G.; Glassmeier, K. H.
1999JGR...104..269V    Altcode:
  The source region of the Birkeland current system, also called the
  generator of the auroral current circuit, is probably located in the
  outer equatorial magnetosphere on closed magnetic field lines. Alfvén
  waves have often been suggested as carriers for field-aligned currents,
  momentum, and electromagnetic energy which is converted to particle
  kinetic energy and ohmic heat at the polar end of the auroral flux
  tubes. In this report we present a model for the interaction of Alfvén
  waves with the plasma in the generator region: the tau generator. We
  show that existing concepts like current and voltage generators
  correspond to extreme values of the intrinsic parameter τ. A frequency
  dependent reflection coefficient can be found which has considerable
  effect on the evolution of magnetospheric oscillations. Furthermore,
  we discuss the physical significance of the parameter τ and relate
  it to some measure for the effective height of the generator region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Telescopio Solar en Hα (HASTA)
Authors: Fernández Borda, R.; Francile, C.; Bagala, G.; Bauer, O.;
   Haerendel, G.; Rieger, E.; Rovira, M.
1999BAAA...43...79F    Altcode:
  El Telescopio Solar en Hα (Hα Solar Telescope for Argentina (-HASTA-)
  fue recientemente instalado en la Estación Astronómica de Altura
  Carlos Ulrrico Cesco (OAFA) en El Leoncito. Este instrumento estudiará
  la evolución de las fulguraciones solares desde tierra con alta
  resolución temporal y espacial. HASTA es un telescopio refractor de
  110 mm con una distancia focal de 165 cm, un filtro Lyot sintonizable
  (±1Å) con un ancho de banda de 0.3 Å y una cámara CCD de alta
  resolución (1280×1024 pixels). Todo el conjunto es controlado en
  forma remota por una PC, la cual además adquiere datos del Sistema de
  Posicionamiento Global (GPS) y de la estación meteorológica. Diseñado
  para detectar fulguraciones, el instrumento trabaja en dos modos
  (patrullaje y fulguración) con una resolución espacial de 1.5 arcseg
  por pixel y una resolución temporal de 2 seg. HASTA comenzó a operar
  en Mayo de 1998 y, junto con otros tres instrumentos solares, que se
  están instalando o se instalaron, harán de El Leoncito un polo de
  observación solar importante en el Hemisferio Sur.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Equator-S: Mission and first results
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.
1999ASIC..537....1B    Altcode: 1999iip..conf....1B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Weakly damped Alfven waves as drivers for spicules
Authors: de Pontieu, B.; Haerendel, G.
1998A&A...338..729D    Altcode:
  We present an analytical model for the damping of Alfven waves in
  the partially ionized chromosphere. The damping is due to collisions
  between ions and neutrals. The ion-neutral collision frequency in this
  environment is such that the ion and neutral populations are almost
  perfectly collisionally coupled, leading the Alfven wave to behave as
  if it acts on the whole plasma (i.e. including neutrals). The small
  but finite coupling time between ions and neutrals leads to damping of
  the Alfven waves. We find that this type of damping of upward traveling
  Alfven waves with frequencies between 0.2 and 0.6 Hz, can cause not only
  significant heating but also upward motion of the upper chromospheric
  plasma. In addition the upward force and heating associated with this
  type of damping can sustain, both dynamically and thermodynamically,
  an already formed chromospheric spicule. The energy flux carried by
  the Alfven waves needed for this type of support of a spicule does
  not seem to be in contradiction with observational and theoretical
  evidence for the presence of Alfven waves in the chromosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Reply [to “Comment on ‘Braking of high-speed flows in the
    near-Earth Tail’ by K. Shiokawa, W. Baumjohann, and G. Haerendel”]
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Shiokawa, K.; Baumjohann, W.
1998GeoRL..25.3503H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MPE Jahresbericht 1997 / 1997 Annual report.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1998mpja.book.....H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Azimuthal pressure gradient as driving force of substorm
    currents
Authors: Shiokawa, K.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.
1998GeoRL..25..959S    Altcode:
  We have studied the azimuthal pressure gradient in the central plasma
  sheet during substorms using plasma and magnetic field data obtained
  by the AMPTE/IRM satellite at nightside in radial distances of 9-15
  R<SUB>E</SUB>. The pressure gradient is statistically estimated for
  the interval when the magnetic field shows a dipolar configuration
  (elevation angle &gt;45°). It is found that by this criterion,
  most data are obtained during and after the passage of high-speed
  ion flow in the vicinity of the neutral sheet during magnetically
  active times. We show that there is an azimuthal gradient of plasma
  pressure in the dipolar field region. The pressure gradient can drive
  a substantial amount of field-aligned current (4.1×10<SUP>5</SUP> A
  per 2-hour local time sector). We suggest that this current is a source
  of the substorm current system after the high-speed ion flow stops.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Freja and ground-based analysis of inverted-V events
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Haerendel, G.; Clemmons, J. H.; Bochm, M. H.;
   Vogt, J.; Bauer, O. H.; Wallis, D. D.; Blomberg, L.; Lühr, H.
1998JGR...103.4303F    Altcode:
  During two campaigns, ground-based auroral observations were performed
  in coordination with Freja. The high temporal and spatial resolution
  of the satellite instruments as well as the real-time recording with a
  stereoscopic camera system from the ground enabled detailed comparison
  of small- and large-scale optical phenomena with particle and field data
  measured by the satellite. Three passes of the satellite over inverted-V
  auroral arcs and over precipitation regions with strong field-aligned
  electron spectra are investigated. Brightness modulations within auroral
  arcs coincide with modulations of primary electron fluxes. The dynamics
  of small-scale structures within arcs as well as the proper motion of
  arcs are analyzed and compared with electric fields measured by the
  satellite and with BARS radar measurements. Energy fluxes independently
  determined from the ground and from the satellite are used to calculate
  the field-aligned conductance. The results agree with predictions of
  the kinetic theory of the mirror force, if we allow for variations of
  the density and thermal energy of the electrons in the source region
  of the magnetosphere. Detailed comparison of electron spectra and
  electric and magnetic field perturbations provide evidence of different
  acceleration mechanisms for the electrons, electrostatic acceleration
  inside inverted-V's, and wave acceleration in transient regions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Introduction to special section: The Freja Mission
Authors: Lundin, Rickard; Haerendel, Gerhard; Grahn, Sven
1998JGR...103.4119L    Altcode:
  Freja was a joint Swedish and German scientific satellite project
  to study the interaction between hot magnetospheric plasma and the
  topside atmosphere/ionosphere. Freja was launched on October 6, 1992,
  and it operated successfully during 4 years until October 1996 when
  the command system ceased to work. Freja enabled high temporal/spatial
  resolution measurements of auroral plasma characteristics. With a
  high telemetry rate (520 kbit/s) and ~15Mbyte distributed onboard
  memories Freja could resolve mesoscale and microscale phenomena in
  the 100 m range for particles and the 1-10 m range for electric and
  magnetic fields. Novel plasma instruments enabled Freja to increase the
  spatial/temporal resolution orders of magnitudes above that achieved by
  its predecessors. The main scientific objective of Freja was to study
  the interaction between the hot magnetospheric plasma with the topside
  atmosphere/ionosphere. This interaction leads to a strong energization
  of magnetospheric and ionospheric plasma and an associated erosion,
  and loss, of matter from the Terrestrial exosphere. Freja orbited
  with an altitude of ~600-1750km, thus covering the lower part of
  the auroral acceleration region. This altitude range hosts processes
  that heat and energize the ionospheric plasma above the auroral zone,
  leading to the escape of ionospheric plasma and the formation of large
  density cavities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High-speed ion flow, substorm current wedge, and multiple Pi
    2 pulsations
Authors: Shiokawa, K.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.; Paschmann,
   G.; Fennell, J. F.; Friis-Christensen, E.; Lühr, H.; Reeves, G. D.;
   Russell, C. T.; Sutcliffe, P. R.; Takahashi, K.
1998JGR...103.4491S    Altcode:
  We have studied the onset timing of earthward high-speed ion flow
  observed by the AMPTE/IRM satellite at 12.3 Earth radii (R<SUB>E</SUB>)
  and 0100 MLT in the central plasma sheet during an isolated substorm
  event on March 1, 1985. The timing of this onset is compared with that
  of the substorm current wedge and Pi 2 magnetic pulsations observed
  by a large number of ground-based stations and the AMPTE/CCE, GOES 5,
  and ISEE 1 satellites and with that of high-energy particle injection
  observed at Los Alamos geosynchronous satellite 1982-019. The onset
  of earthward high-speed flow is observed 3 min before the onset
  of the global current wedge formation and 6 min before the onset of
  high-energy particle injection. The three bursts of the high-speed flow
  observed at AMPTE/IRM are likely to correspond to three compressional
  pulses observed at AMPTE/CCE at 6 R<SUB>E</SUB> and three Pi 2 wave
  packets observed at midlatitude ground stations. On the basis of these
  observations we conclude that the substorm current wedge is caused
  by inertia current and the current due to flow shear at the braking
  point of the earthward high-speed flow during the initial stage of the
  substorm expansion phase. The braking point is well separated from the
  near-Earth neutral line. It is also suggested that the compressional
  pulses and fluctuations of field-aligned currents generated at the flow
  braking point can be the initial cause of the Pi 2 magnetic pulsations
  in the inner magnetosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Reflection and transmission of Alfvén waves at the auroral
    acceleration region
Authors: Vogt, J.; Haerendel, G.
1998GeoRL..25..277V    Altcode:
  Alfvén waves transfer field-aligned currents, momentum and energy
  from the source region in the equatorial magnetosphere along Earth's
  magnetic field lines to the polar ionosphere and play therefore an
  important role in auroral electrodynamics. The parallel potential
  drop of some kV in the auroral acceleration region (AAR) at altitudes
  of some 1000 km has considerable effect on the propagation of these
  waves. The purpose of this report is to investigate the reflection
  and transmission properties of the AAR in the frame of a thin sheet
  approximation. Combining key relations of auroral electrodynamics with
  the requirement of current continuity results in an easy-to-handle
  physical description of the problem. The model provides an opportunity
  to study different acceleration mechanisms. It turns out that the
  reflection properties of the auroral zone depends strongly on the
  perpendicular scale length of the incident wave.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische
    Physik. Jahresbericht für 1997.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1998MitAG..81..229H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: 40 Years of COSPAR
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Grzedzielski, S.; Cavallo, G.; Battrick, B.
1998fyc..conf.....H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Braking of High-Speed Flow and Azimuthal Pressure Gradient
    as Driving Forces of Substorm Currents
Authors: Shiokawa, K.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.
1998ASSL..238..355S    Altcode: 1998subs.conf..355S
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: What is the Role of the Inner Magnetosphere During Substorms?
Authors: Reeves, G. D.; Haerendel, G.
1998ASSL..238..743R    Altcode: 1998subs.conf..743R
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma Flow and Critical Velocity Ionization in Cometary Comae
    (GRL 13(3) 1986)
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1998coen.book..202H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Opening address of the cospar president to the cospar
    colloquium on magnetospheric research with advanced techniques
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1998mrat.conf....3H    Altcode:
  COSPAR has been conceived at the beginning of the space era to promote
  space research and related applications with emphasis on the exchange
  of results, information, and opinions. By concentrating on data,
  methods, and scientific insights, COSPAR has always managed to keep
  clear of political interference, on the contrary, to build bridges
  across political barriers. After the fall of the iron curtain, the
  bridging function of COSPAR in the area of space research may appear
  to have lost importance; however, several barriers continue to exist
  and new challenges are emerging that need the platform offered by
  the COSPAR committee to bring together colleagues form East and West,
  from South and North, from poor and rich, and from well-established
  and newly entering space-faring nations. The COSPAR conference is
  meant as a forum for concerned space agencies, other institutions,
  and administration with the aim to establish closer cooperation and
  to learn from each other in science and applications.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: New Wavelength Determinations of Mid-Infrared Fine-structure
    Lines by Infrared Space Observatory Short Wavelength Spectrometer
Authors: Feuchtgruber, H.; Lutz, D.; Beintema, D. A.; Valentijn,
   E. A.; Bauer, O. H.; Boxhoorn, D. R.; De Graauw, Th.; Haser, L. N.;
   Haerendel, G.; Heras, A. M.; Katterloher, R. O.; Kester, D. J. M.;
   Lahuis, F.; Leech, K. J.; Morris, P. W.; Roelfsema, P. R.; Salama,
   A.; Schaeidt, S. G.; Spoon, H. W. W.; Vandenbussche, B.; Wieprecht, E.
1997ApJ...487..962F    Altcode:
  We report accurate new wavelengths for 29 mid-infrared ionic
  fine-structure lines, based on observations with the Short Wavelength
  Spectrometer (SWS) on board the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). Our
  results originate from observations of NGC 7027, NGC 6543, NGC 6302,
  the Circinus galaxy, Sgr A West, and W51 IRS 2. The obtained accuracies
  (λ/Δλ) range from 3 × 10<SUP>4</SUP> to 1 × 10<SUP>5</SUP>,
  depending on instrumental mode and uncertainty in radial velocities. <P
  />Based on observations made with ISO, an ESA project with instruments
  funded by ESA Member States (especially the PI countries: France,
  Germany, The Netherlands, and the United Kingdom) and with the
  participation of ISAS and NASA. The SWS is a joint project of SRON
  and MPE.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The distribution of stars and dust in spiral galaxies: the
    edge-on spiral UGC 2048.
Authors: Xilouris, E. M.; Kylafis, N. D.; Papamastorakis, J.;
   Paleologou, E. V.; Haerendel, G.
1997A&A...325..135X    Altcode:
  We compare B, V, I surface photometry of the edge-on spiral galaxy UGC
  2048 with corresponding surface photometry calculated from a realistic
  model of spiral galaxies, taking into account both absorption and
  scattering by dust. Our goal is to determine the distribution of stars
  and dust in the galaxy from the observed surface photometry. In the
  model that we use we assume that the stars and the dust in the disk
  are distributed axisymmetrically and exponentially in both directions,
  the radial and the perpendicular to the plane of the disk. The de
  Vaucouleurs R^1/4^ law and the modified Hubble profile are used to fit
  the central region of the galaxy and a comparison is made between the
  two. For UGC 2048 we have found a face-on central optical depth of less
  than one in all three bands. This means that, if the galaxy were seen
  face-on, it would be transparent in the optical region of the spectrum,
  despite the prominent dust lane seen in the edge-on picture. We have
  also determined the scalelengths and scaleheights of the stars and
  the dust in the disk, the bulge characteristics and the inclination
  angle of the galaxy.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ASPI experiment: measurements of fields and waves on board
    the INTERBALL-1 spacecraft
Authors: Klimov, S.; Romanov, S.; Amata, E.; Blecki, J.; Büchner, J.;
   Juchniewicz, J.; Rustenbach, J.; Triska, P.; Woolliscroft, L. J. C.;
   Savin, S.; Afanas'yev, Yu.; de Angelis, U.; Auster, U.; Bellucci, G.;
   Best, A.; Farnik, F.; Formisano, V.; Gough, P.; Grard, R.; Grushin, V.;
   Haerendel, G.; Ivchenko, V.; Korepanov, V.; Lehmann, H.; Nikutowski,
   B.; Nozdrachev, M.; Orsini, S.; Parrot, M.; Petrukovich, A.; Rauch,
   J. L.; Sauer, K.; Skalsky, A.; Slominski, J.; Trotignon, J. G.; Vojta,
   J.; Wronowski, R.
1997AnGeo..15..514K    Altcode:
  The plasma-wave experiment ASPI (analysis of spectra of plasma waves
  and instabilities) on board the INTERBALL spacecraft is a combined
  wave diagnostics experiment. It performs measurements of the DC and
  AC magnetic field vector by flux-gate and search-coil sensors, the DC
  and AC electric field vector by Langmuir double probes and the plasma
  current by Langmuir split probe. Preliminary data analysis shows the
  low noise levels of the sensors and the compatibility of new data with
  the results of previous missions. During several months of in-orbit
  operation a rich collection of data was acquired, examples of which
  at the magnetopause and plasma sheet are presented in second part of
  the paper.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Braking of high-speed flows in the near-Earth tail
Authors: Shiokawa, K.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.
1997GeoRL..24.1179S    Altcode:
  We have studied possible braking mechanisms of high-speed ion flows in
  the near-Earth central plasma sheet for radial distances between 9 and
  19 Earth Radii (R<SUB>E</SUB>) on the basis of observations made by
  the AMPTE/IRM satellite. Flows with velocities in excess of 400 km/s
  are almost always Earthward for this range, indicating that the source
  of the flows is beyond 19 R<SUB>E</SUB>. Though the occurrence rate
  of the high-speed flows substantially decreases when the satellite
  comes closer to the Earth, high-speed flows with velocities higher
  than 600 km/s are still observed. We suggest that the high-speed flows
  are stopped at a clear boundary between the regions of dipolar field
  and tail-like field in the plasma sheet. The boundary corresponds to
  the inner edge of the neutral sheet. The average jump of the magnetic
  field at the boundary, which is estimated from the observations by
  assuming a pressure balance, is 6.7 nT. The inertia current caused
  by the braking of the flow and the current caused by pileup of the
  magnetic flux at the stopping point are quantitatively estimated and
  discussed in relation to the formation of the substorm current wedge.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dynamics of Structures in the Plasma Tail of Comet Hale-Bopp
Authors: Fischer, Ch. Th.; Haerendel, G.; Bogdanov, A. T.
1997EM&P...77..279F    Altcode: 1999EM&P...77..279F
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Sedimentation of barium ions from the CRRES G-9 release
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Haerendel, G.; Valenzuela, A.
1997GeoRL..24..763F    Altcode:
  The CRRES G-9 barium release was designed for the investigation of
  the field line tracing between the release point at 17.4°N latitude
  and the area of ion cloud sedimentation at about -41°S latitude. Very
  recently published images of the ion cloud after the release showed the
  development of at least two weak filaments between the release point
  and the main ion cloud [Zaitsev et al., 1996]. Observations made from
  an aircraft in the south Atlantic region verify that at least one of
  these filaments survived the transequatorial transit and was still
  separated from the main barium cloud during sedimentation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MPE Jahresbericht / Annual report 1996.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1997mpja.book.....H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Rosetta Lander - In Situ Investigation of a Comet's Nucleus
Authors: Ulamec, S.; Feuerbacher, B.; Wittmann, K.; Rosenbauer, H.;
   Bibring, J. P.; Moura, D.; Mugnuolo, R.; Haerendel, G.
1997LPI....28.1461U    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Max-Planck-Institut für Extraterrestrische
    Physik. Jahresbericht für 1996.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1997MitAG..80..227H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The COSPAR colloquium on space remote sensing of subtropical
    ocean. 12-16 September 1995 Taipei, Taiwan
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1997srss.conf....7H    Altcode:
  This chapter presents the speech of Professor Gerhard Haerendel,
  president of the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR), on the opening
  ceremony of the second colloquium on Space Remote Sensing of Subtropical
  Oceans held in Taiwan. The chapter discusses the role of COSPAR in
  promoting space research and related applications worldwide with an
  emphasis on the exchange of results, information, and opinions. This
  insistence on tangible results and on scientific data collected in
  space or about space constitutes the core of COSPAR's activity and
  has allowed it to steer the clearance of many political reef in
  past decades. COSPAR's expertise in international cooperation can
  be of benefit to countries involved in programs of space research
  and related applications. One of these expertise is its ability of
  monitoring and keeping surveillance of the global human environment,
  including the surface of land areas and of oceans. In addition, space
  observations are of great help in monitoring the geographic extent of
  disasters-natural or induced by man-and in controlling the efficiency of
  steps undertaken to mitigate the nefarious effects of such calamities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Electron Drift Instrument for Cluster
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Melzner, F.; Frenzel, R.; Vaith, H.; Parigger,
   P.; Pagel, U.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Scopke,
   N.; Torbert, R. B.; Briggs, B.; Chan, J.; Lynch, K.; Morey, K.; Quinn,
   J. M.; Simpson, D.; Young, C.; McIlwain, C. E.; Fillius, W.; Kerr,
   S. S.; Mahieu, R.; Whipple, E. C.
1997SSRv...79..233P    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Presidential address
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1997AdSpR..20.1325H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral-arc splitting by intrusion of a new convection channel
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Haerendel, G.; Buchert, S.; Lanchester, B. S.
1996AnGeo..14.1257F    Altcode: 1997AnGeo..14.1257F; 1996AnG....14.1257F
  During a run of the Common Programme Three of the EISCAT radar the
  splitting of an auroral arc was observed by high time-resolution,
  ground-based cameras when the UHF radar beam was close to the
  arc. The evening eastward electrojet situation with a large-scale
  northward ionospheric electric field was disturbed by the intrusion
  of a convection channel with southward electric field from the
  east. The interaction of the new convection channel with the auroral
  arc caused changes in arc brightness and arc splitting, i.e. the
  creation of a new arc parallel to the pre-existing auroral arc. The
  event is described as one possibility for the creation of parallel
  arcs during slightly disturbed magnetic conditions far from the
  Harang discontinuity. Acknowledgements. We would like to thank the
  director and staff of EISCAT for the data used in this study. EISCAT
  is supported by the scientific research councils of Finland, France,
  Germany, Norway, Sweden and the UK. We would like to express our special
  thanks to A. P. van Eyken and U. P. Løvhaug for their cooperation and
  assistance in running the IPS campaigns and to W. P. Wilkinson for
  discussions on fast-stream/slow-stream interaction regions. Two of
  us (ARB and PJM) are supported by PPARC. Topical Editor D. Alcaydé
  thanks J. F. Mckenzie and M. Pick for their help in evaluating this
  paper.--&gt; Correspondence to: A. R. Breen--&gt;

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observing with the ISO Short-Wavelength Spectrometer.
Authors: de Graauw, T.; Haser, L. N.; Beintema, D. A.; Roelfsema,
   P. R.; van Agthoven, H.; Barl, L.; Bauer, O. H.; Bekenkamp, H. E. G.;
   Boonstra, A. -J.; Boxhoorn, D. R.; Cote, J.; de Groene, P.; van
   Dijkhuizen, C.; Drapatz, S.; Evers, J.; Feuchtgruber, H.; Frericks,
   M.; Genzel, R.; Haerendel, G.; Heras, A. M.; van der Hucht, K. A.;
   van der Hulst, T.; Huygen, R.; Jacobs, H.; Jakob, G.; Kamperman, T.;
   Katterloher, R. O.; Kester, D. J. M.; Kunze, D.; Kussendrager, D.;
   Lahuis, F.; Lamers, H. J. G. L. M.; Leech, K.; van der Lei, S.; van
   der Linden, R.; Luinge, W.; Lutz, D.; Melzner, F.; Morris, P. W.; van
   Nguyen, D.; Ploeger, G.; Price, S.; Salama, A.; Schaeidt, S. G.; Sijm,
   N.; Smoorenburg, C.; Spakman, J.; Spoon, H.; Steinmayer, M.; Stoecker,
   J.; Valentijn, E. A.; Vandenbussche, B.; Visser, H.; Waelkens, C.;
   Waters, L. B. F. M.; Wensink, J.; Wesselius, P. R.; Wiezorrek, E.;
   Wieprecht, E.; Wijnbergen, J. J.; Wildeman, K. J.; Young, E.
1996A&A...315L..49D    Altcode:
  The Short-Wavelength Spectrometer (SWS) is one of the four instruments
  on-board ESA's Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), launched on November
  17, 1995. The spectrometer covers the wavelength range of 2.38 to
  45.2μm with a spectral resolution ranging from 1000 to 2000. By
  inserting Fabry-Perot filters the resolution can be enhanced by a
  factor 20 for the wavelength range from 11.4 to 44.5μm. An overview
  is given of the instrument, its in-orbit calibration, performance,
  observing modes and off-line processing software.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Microsatellites and space station for science and technology
    utilisation
Authors: Spallicci, A.; Graf, E.; Perino, M.; Matteoni, M.; Piras,
   A.; Arduini, C.; Catastini, G.; Ellmers, F.; Hall, D.; Haerendel,
   G.; Nobili, A.; Iess, L.; Pinto, I.; Stocker, J.
1996AcAau..39..605S    Altcode:
  The main results of an ESTEC study on microsatellites and the
  International Space Station (ISS) are shown herein. One of the original
  objectives of the space station has been to be a staging post for
  assembly, check-out and deployment of satellites and deep-space
  missions. ISS will not be equipped to process and launch large
  spacecraft requiring complex assembly and propellant operations, but
  deployment of a microsatellite might still be feasible and advantageous,
  as other international partners show similar interests. The assembly,
  launch and retrieval of small satellites with ISS (e.g. up to 225 kg,
  100 W of power from body mounted solar cells or 225 W from solar panels,
  size less than 1.6 × 0.8 × 1 m, 250 b s <SUP>-1</SUP> to 2 kb s
  <SUP>-1</SUP> of up and down link data) is a future but a technically
  viable option to raise the attractiveness of ISS for those payloads
  whose requirements would not be satisfied by internal or external
  accommodation on ISS. Two classes of payloads were identified: (1)
  Space Station investigation (SSI) type; (2) Space Station exploitation
  (SSE) type. SSI payloads conduct investigations of direct interest to
  ISS as electromagnetic, radiation and particle near-environment (ISS
  sniffers). Instead, SSE investigations are totally unrelated to ISS and
  they make solely advantage of its infrastructure and facilities. For
  the latter it will be necessary to compare the same experiment with
  and without ISS in the mission scenario, as a proof of effectiveness
  (in costs and/or scientific return) with respect to satellites launched
  by traditional means. Such effectiveness may be represented by (i)
  simplicity of design, e.g. the proximity of ISS eases the TT&amp;C
  subsystem, (ii) servicing and re-utilisation for successive experiments,
  (iii) readiness to launch when a specific and unpredictable event
  occurs (e.g. supernovae). Different scenarios and implementations have
  been studied for launch and operations. Safe orbital trajectories
  have been identified also without a propulsion system. In case of a
  on-board propulsion system, about 50 kg for cold gas fuel and another
  50 kg for dry propulsion system, were found necessary for a mission
  lifetime in ISS neighbourhood (within 50 km) up to about 6 months. The
  study has conceived 13 proposals in disciplines ranging from metrology
  and general physics, to space science and technology, as examples of
  potential applications but in no manner constituting an exhaustive
  picture of user interests. An SSI experiment for the analysis of ISS
  environment was selected as potential first mission.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral emission profiles extracted from three-dimensionally
    reconstructed arcs
Authors: Frey, S.; Frey, H. U.; Carr, D. J.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel,
   G.
1996JGR...10121731F    Altcode:
  The mathematics of emission-computed tomography is applied to the
  analysis of stereoscopic observations of auroral arcs. The incomplete
  data problem for three-dimensional computerized tomography, due to
  the very limited angular range and the small number of observers, is
  solved by an iterative least squares method. A theoretical example
  with the projection of two auroral arcs can be reconstructed with
  projection root-mean-square errors of the order of 1%. Application
  of noise deteriorates the quality of reconstruction, but with
  suitable low-pass filtering, root-mean-square errors of less than
  5% can be obtained. The agreement between observed and calculated
  projections, as well as between the original and the reconstructed
  volume emission distribution, is quantitatively discussed for different
  observation geometries. With only two observation sites the range of
  acceptable observation geometries is limited to distances of 25 to
  50 km between the observers but depends on the actual location and
  the morphology of the aurora. Sources of distortion of real auroral
  observations with intensified CCD cameras are discussed and correction
  procedures proposed. The complete procedure is applied to a real
  stereoscopic auroral observation. The correspondence of original
  pictures and projections of the reconstructed volume is discussed,
  and emission profiles along magnetic field lines are extracted from
  the three-dimensionally reconstructed arc.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Momentum coupling in the “CRIT II” critical ionization
    velocity experiment
Authors: Liou, K.; Torbert, R. B.; Haerendel, G.
1996JGR...10119649L    Altcode:
  A unified theory has been developed to explain the formation of a
  quasi-dc electric pulse (ω&lt;=Ω<SUB>i</SUB>) induced by an ionizing
  neutral barium beam across an ionospheric plasma. We obtained a
  generalized form for the dc electric field in the plane perpendicular
  to the magnetic field within a simplified slab barium cloud moving
  perpendicular to the geomagnetic fields. A current system associated
  with the quasi-dc electric field was also proposed to provide a way to
  transfer the momentum between the streaming barium cloud and the ambient
  plasma. The characteristic time derived by using this model for momentum
  coupling between the streaming barium cloud and the ambient plasma
  is found to be in agreement with the previous result. The quasi-dc
  electric field predicted by this model is reasonably consistent with
  the “CRIT II” critical ionization velocity measurements. On the
  basis of the constrains of the conservation of energy and momentum,
  we found that Alfvén's critical ionization velocity (CIV) effect is a
  self-limiting ionization process in a finite extent neutral cloud. It
  may be the reason why the CIV effect took place in CRIT II but lasted
  only for a very short period, and it may have resulted in low ionization
  yields in most of space CIV experiments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Curiosity and chance
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1996JGR...10110541H    Altcode:
  The author recounts some stations of his professional life, which
  was to a large extent dedicated to active experimentation with plasma
  clouds in space and to the development of theoretical concepts for some
  intriguing plasmaphsical processes. The human and political environment
  of this work receives some coverage as well as his opinion of state
  and future of his discipline.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: MPE Jahresbericht / Annual report 1995.
Authors: Genzel, R.; Haerendel, G.
1996mpja.book.....G    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical and radar observations of auroral arcs with emphasis
    on small-scale structures.
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Olipitz, B. U.; Buchert, S.; Bauer, O. H.;
   Rieger, E.; La Hoz, C.
1996JATP...58...71H    Altcode:
  During a campaign in January 1988 the authors observed auroral arcs
  with the EISCAT UHF radar system and a low light level TV camera. The
  aim was to compare apparent motions of the arc and its small-scale
  structures with plasma motions in the adjacent F-region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A balloon-borne experiment to investigate the Martian
    magnetic field
Authors: Schwingenschuh, K.; Feldhofer, H.; Koren, W.; Jernej, I.;
   Stachel, M.; Riedler, W.; Slamanig, H.; Auster, H. -U.; Rustenbach,
   J.; Fornacon, H. K.; Schenk, H. J.; Hillenmaier, O.; Haerendel, G.;
   Yeroshenko, Ye.; Styashkin, V.; Zaroutzky, A.; Best, A.; Scholz, G.;
   Russell, C. T.; Means, J.; Pierce, D.; Luhmann, J. G.
1996AdSpR..17i..81S    Altcode: 1996AdSpR..17...81S
  The Space Research Institute of the Austrian Academy, of Sciences
  (Graz, Austria) in cooperation with MPE (Berlin, Germany), GFZ Potsdam
  (Obs. Niemegk, Germany) IZMIRAN/IOFAN (Moscow, Russian) and IGPP/UCLA
  (Los Angeles, USA) is designing the magnetic field experiment
  MAGIBAL (MAGnetic field experiment aboard a martian BALloon) to
  investigate the magnetic field on the surface of Mars. The dual sensor
  fluxgate magnetometer is part of the MARS-98/MARS-TOGETHER balloon
  payload. During a ten days period the balloon will float over a distance
  of about 2000 km at altitudes between 0 and 4 km. Due to the limited
  power and telemetry allocation the magnetometer can transmit only one
  vector per ten seconds and spectral information in the frequency range
  from 2 - 25 Hz. The dynamic range is +/- 2000 nT. The main scientific
  objectives of the experiment are: • Determination of the magnetism
  of the Martian rocks • Investigation of the leakage of the solar
  wind induced magnetosphere using the correlation between orbiter and
  balloon observations • Measurement of the magnetic field profile
  between the orbiter and the surface of Mars during the descent phase
  of the balloon. Terrestrial test flights with a hot air balloon were
  performed in order to test the original MAGIBAL equipment under balloon
  flight conditions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical and radar observations of the motion of auroral arcs.
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Haerendel, G.; Knudsen, D.; Buchert, S.; Bauer,
   O. H.
1996JATP...58...57F    Altcode:
  During a nine-day observational campaign in February 1992 the authors
  used an image-intensified CCD TV camera along with the EISCAT radar to
  observe auroral arcs in the magnetic zenith above Kiruna. The authors
  determine the normal motions of auroral arcs near magnetic zenith and
  compare them with the plasma velocities measured by EISCAT. The interest
  focuses on the relative motions of arcs and ionospheric plasma and the
  changes of tangential velocity as the plasma traverses the arcs. In
  all six cases, relative motions of arc and plasma of the order of 200
  m s<SUP>-1</SUP> are found. They are interpreted in relation to the
  current system to which the arc belongs as a trace of an upward-directed
  field-aligned sheet current. In most cases the arc moves so as to reduce
  the size and energy content of the current system, but the opposite
  case is also observed. There is a striking correlation between the
  N-S motion of arcs and plasma, but the arcs tend to lag behind.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Studies of auroral arcs using Freja satellite and ground-based
    data
Authors: Frey, H. U.; Haerendel, G.; Clemmons, J.; Wallis, D. D.;
   Vogt, J.; Bauer, O. H.; Rieger, E.; Boehm, M. H.; Lühr, H.
1996AdSpR..18h.107F    Altcode: 1996AdSpR..18..107F
  During two Freja passes over auroral arc systems special wide-angle
  CCD cameras were operated from the ground. Comparisons of the
  optical observations with satellite-measured plasma parameters are
  performed. Motions of fine structures of the arcs are interpreted
  in terms of high-altitude electric fields shielded from the lower
  ionosphere. Independent measurements of current density, accelerating
  voltage and energy flux are evaluated and show good agreement.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ESA and the Central Issues of Space Plasma Physics
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1995ESASP.387...65H    Altcode: 1995tyec.conf...65H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observation of electromagnetic oxygen cyclotron waves in a
    flickering aurora
Authors: Lund, E. J.; LaBelle, J.; Torbert, R. B.; Liou, K.; Peria,
   W.; Kletzing, C. A.; Kelley, M. C.; Baker, S. D.; Primdahl, F.;
   Stenbaek-Nielsen, H. C.; Ranta, A.; Haerendel, G.; Frey, H. U.
1995GeoRL..22.2465L    Altcode:
  Instruments on the Auroral Turbulence rocket detected several intervals
  of weak electromagnetic oscillations at frequencies of 6-13 Hz in a
  strongly flickering auroral arc. These oscillations have amplitudes of
  up to δB ∼ 3 nT and δE ∼ 4 mV/m and have downward field-aligned
  Poynting fluxes of up to ∼10<SUP>-5</SUP> W/m². Fluctuations in the
  parallel electron flux at about 9 Hz were observed in association with
  the strongest of these oscillations. Simultaneous ground-based optical
  data show that the arc was flickering at frequencies of 8-15 Hz. The
  observed frequencies would match the oxygen cyclotron frequency at
  ∼4500 km altitude. In one wave/particle event the apparent lag of
  the waves behind the modulated electrons implies a modulation source
  altitude of 2500-5000 km. We interpret these waves as electromagnetic
  ion cyclotron waves originating in the auroral acceleration region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Technical Challenge, Scientific Thrill: A Long Term Lander
    on an Active Comet
Authors: Ulamec, S.; Feuerbacher, B.; Wittmann, K.; Rosenbauer, H.;
   Haerendel, G.; Lura, F.
1995LPI....26.1431U    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Message from the President of COSPAR
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1995CIBu..133....1H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Micro and Meso Scale Measurements by the Freja Satellite
Authors: Lundin, R.; Haerendel, G.
1995GMS....86..295L    Altcode: 1995spcb.book..295L
  Freja, a joint Swedish and German scientific satellite launched on
  October 6 1992, is designed to give high temporal/spatial resolution
  measurements of the auroral plasma characteristics. A high telemetry
  rate (520 kbits/s) and ≈15 Mbyte distributed on board memories
  (give ≈2 Mbits/s during one minute) enables Freja to resolve meso
  and micro scale phenomena in the 100 m range for particles and 1-10
  m range for electric and magnetic fields. The on-board UV imager will
  resolve auroral structures of kilometer size with a time resolution of
  one image per 6 s. Novel plasma instruments give Freja the capability
  to increase the spatial/temporal resolution orders of magnitudes above
  that achieved on satellites before. <P />The scientific objectives
  of Freja is to study the interaction between the hot magnetospheric
  plasma with the topside atmosphere/ionosphere. This interaction leads
  to a strong energization of magnetospheric and ionospheric plasma
  and an associated erosion, and loss, of matter from the terrestrial
  exosphere. Freja orbits with an altitude of ≈600 -1750 km, thus
  covering the lower part of the auroral acceleration region. This
  altitude range hosts processes that heat and energize the ionospheric
  plasma above the auroral zone, leading to the escape of ionospheric
  plasma and the formation of large density cavities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetic energy conversion in the Corona and Magnetosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1995HiA....10..302H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Electron Beam Instrument (F6) on Freja
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Boehm, M.; Höfner, H.; Frenzel, R.; Parigger,
   P.; Melzner, F.; Haerendel, G.; Kletzing, C. A.; Torbert, R. B.;
   Sartori, G.
1994SSRv...70..447P    Altcode:
  The Electron Beam Instrument (F6) onFreja is the first attempt to apply
  the electron drift technique in a region of large ambient magnetic
  fields. The paper describes the operational principles, the technical
  realization, and the difficulties encountered in the derivation of
  the electric fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The double probe electric field experiment on Freja: Experiment
    description and first results
Authors: Marklund, G. T.; Blomberg, L. G.; Lindqvist, P. -A.;
   Fälthammar, C. -G.; Haerendel, G.; Mozer, F. S.; Pedersen, A.;
   Tanskanen, P.
1994SSRv...70..483M    Altcode:
  A description is given of theFreja double-probe electric field
  instrument. Its capability to perform high-resolution measurements
  of the aurora and its fine-structure as well as collect information
  on sub-auroral and low-latitude phenomena is illustrated by selected
  results from the first six months of operation. The instrument is highly
  flexible and possible to operate in a number of different modes. It is
  also equipped with a 4-Megabyte burst memory for high data sampling
  rate and temporary storage of data. It has been fully operational
  since October 1992, and delivers data from ≈22 hr day<SUP>-1</SUP>
  including about 5 6 auroral crossings of the northern and southern
  auroral ionosphere. New and important information on the auroral fine
  structure and electrodynamics is obtained by means of burst resolution
  data (6144 samples s<SUP>-1</SUP>) and normal resolution data (768
  samples s<SUP>-1</SUP>). Common burst data collection triggered by the
  electric field event detector has turned out to be very useful for the
  selection of scientifically interesting events. This is illustrated by
  high-resolution data of a pair of extremely intense and narrow electric
  field structures (1 V m<SUP>-1</SUP>) which are associated with a total
  absence of precipitating particles, depletions of the thermal plasma
  and with an intense wave activity. The low inclination of theFreja
  orbit provides a new perspective for studying largescale phenomena
  associated with east-west gradients as is exemplified by electric
  field data from a satellite crossing over north-south oriented auroral
  structures presumably resulting from rotational distortions of east-west
  aligned auroral arcs. The different plasma regimes encountered byFreja
  are continuously monitored by means of current sweeps applied to the
  probes and by the satellite potential. In addition, overview data (8
  samples s<SUP>-1</SUP>) are collected from full orbits and stored in
  the on-board memory and have proved to be extremely valuable, providing
  new information on global electric field phenomena at subauroral and
  lower latitudes, such as the intense poleward electric fields and
  Pc-1 observations that have been made near the plasmapause during
  substorm activity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Freja science mission
Authors: Lundin, R.; Haerendel, G.; Grahn, S.
1994SSRv...70..405L    Altcode:
  Freja <SUP>*</SUP>, a joint Swedish and German scientific satellite
  launched on october 6 1992, is designed to give high temporal/spatial
  resolution measurements of auroral plasma characteristics. A
  high telemetry rate (520 kbits s<SUP>-1</SUP>) and ≈15 Mbyte
  distributed on board memories that give on the average 2 Mbits
  s<SUP>-1</SUP> for one minute enablesFreja to resolve meso and micro
  scale phenomena in the 100 m range for particles and 1 10 m range for
  electric and magnetic fields. The on-board UV imager resolve auroral
  structures of kilometer size with a time resolution of one image per 6
  s. Novel plasma instruments giveFreja the capability to increase the
  spatial/temporal resolution orders of magnitudes above that achieved
  on satellites before. The scientific objective ofFreja is to study
  the interaction between the hot magnetospheric plasma with the topside
  atmosphere/ionosphere. This interaction leads to a strong energization
  of magnetospheric and ionospheric plasma and an associated erosion,
  and loss, of matter from the Terrestrial exosphere.Freja orbits
  with an altitude of ≈600 1750 km, thus covering the lower part of
  the auroral acceleration region. This altitude range hosts processes
  that heat and energize the ionospheric plasma above the auroral zone,
  leading to the escape of ionospheric plasma and the formation of large
  density cavities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The TESP electron spectrometer and correlator (F7) on Freja
Authors: Boehm, M.; Paschmann, G.; Clemmons, J.; Höfner, H.; Frenzel,
   R.; Ertl, M.; Haerendel, G.; Hill, P.; Lauche, H.; Eliasson, L.;
   Lundin, R.
1994SSRv...70..509B    Altcode:
  The two-dimensional electron spectrometer onFreja consists of
  a ‘top-hat’-type electrostatic analyzer with the addition
  of entrance aperture deflection plates. The field of view of the
  concentric-hemisphere analyzer is modified from a plane to a cone up
  to 25° from this plane by application of bipolar high voltages to the
  deflection plates. Fast high-voltage sweeps allow full 10 eV 25 KeV,
  500-point distribution function measurements in 32 ms. Constant-energy
  or limited energy-sweep modes allow time resolutions down to 1 ms. A
  set of electronics combines the electron data with F4 wave data to
  allow on-board calculations of cross-correlations between electron
  fluxes and wave electric fields. Additionally, a fast signal processor
  is capable of searching the electron pulse sequence from one or several
  channeltrons for high-frequency modulations in the electron flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Inverted-V events simultaneously observed with the Freja
    satellite and from the ground
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Frey, H. U.; Bauer, O. H.; Rieger, E.;
   Clemmons, J.; Boehm, M. H.; Wallis, D. D.; Lühr, H.
1994GeoRL..21.1891H    Altcode:
  The paper reports data received from the Freja satellite during two
  passes over broad auroral arc systems or inverted-V events above
  Gillam/Manitoba when special wide-angle CCD cameras were operated at
  this location in addition to the CANOPUS network. Detailed comparisons
  of the visible structures with modulations of the primary electron
  fluxes are performed. Motions of this fine structures are interpreted
  in terms of high-altitude electric fields shielded from the lower
  ionosphere. Simultaneous readings of current density, accelerating
  voltage and energy flux, the latter determined both from particle
  and auroral brightness measurements, are found to be internally
  consistent. We calculate from these data the effective resistance
  encountered by the electric currents and find agreement with the kinetic
  theory of the mirror impedance, if we allow for substantial variations
  in density and energy of the source electrons in the magnetosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Signatures of energy-time dispersed electron fluxes measured
    by Freja
Authors: Clemmons, J. H.; Boehm, M. H.; Paschmann, G. E.; Haerendel, G.
1994GeoRL..21.1899C    Altcode:
  Two measurements of velocity-dispersed electron fluxes at altitudes near
  1750 km are reported. The energy-time signatures of both observations
  are interpreted in terms of a simple time-of-flight (TOF) scenario. The
  first measurement occurred at low magnetic latitude (∼62°)
  and consisted of three injection events. Analysis yields a source
  location near the equator ∼6.5 R<SUB>E</SUB> from the spacecraft and
  provides evidence that the injections were periodic. The injections
  are interpreted as being the result of interactions with waves near
  the earthward edge of the equatorial plasma sheet, and the presence
  of fine structure in the fluxes with timescales of a few hundred ms
  provides new information on the injection process. Analysis of the
  second measurement leads to the determination of a source location
  about 850 km above the spacecraft. Although the simple model is able
  to explain the observations at small pitch angles, the measurements at
  large pitch angles require that the model be refined, and a modification
  which invokes pitch-angle diffusion is suggested.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Freja Project
Authors: Lundin, R.; Haerendel, G.; Grahn, S.
1994GeoRL..21.1823L    Altcode:
  Freja is a joint Swedish and German scientific satellite project
  to study the interaction between hot magnetospheric plasma and the
  topside atmosphere/ionosphere. This interaction leads to a strong
  energization of magnetospheric and ionospheric plasma and an associated
  erosion and loss of matter from the terrestrial atmosphere. Using
  novel plasma instruments and a high data rate Freja have provided
  a number of “firsts” in high resolution plasma diagnostics from
  satellites. Freja's high spatial/temporal resolution permits studies
  of meso- and micro-scale phenomena in the 100-m range for particles
  and in the 10-m range for electric and magnetic fields. The Freja
  satellite was successfully launched on October 6, 1992 into an orbit
  with 63° inclination, an apogee of 1750 km and perigee of 600 km.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Freja observations of narrow inverted-V electron precipitation
    by the Two-Dimensional Electron Spectrometer
Authors: Boehm, M. H.; Paschmann, G.; Clemmons, J.; Haerendel, G.;
   Eliasson, L.; Lundin, R.
1994GeoRL..21.1895B    Altcode:
  Observations of several steady, ∼1-5 km scale inverted-V's by
  the Freja F7 Two-dimensional Electron Spectrometer (TESP) are
  described. Such narrow structures are not common, but provide an
  opportunity for observing edge precipitation and the movement of arcs
  through the plasma. Velocities of inverted-V potential structures in
  the plasma frame can be derived from the observed time delay between
  precipitating and mirrored electrons. These velocities determine
  whether horizontal plasma flow into a potential structure can provide
  the source population for arc edge precipitation. It is found that
  the intensity of the arc edge precipitation is not associated in any
  expected way with this velocity, indicating another source of plasma
  for arc edge precipitation is required.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Large-scale auroral plasma density cavities observed by Freja
Authors: Lundin, R.; Eliasson, L.; Haerendel, G.; Boehm, M.;
   Holback, B.
1994GeoRL..21.1903L    Altcode:
  Freja, the joint Swedish and German scientific satellite, has an orbit
  inclination that allows it to traverse the auroral oval tangentially and
  stay for minutes on field lines connected to the auroral energization
  region. One signature of the auroral energization process is the
  heating/transverse energization of ionospheric ions. Associated
  with such transverse heating/energization of ionospheric ions is a
  depletion of cold plasma in the topside ionosphere. We have studied
  several Freja passes at ≈1700 km altitude with long time periods of
  plasma depletion and transverse ion acceleration. Inside these depletion
  regions the density may decrease by more than two orders of magnitude
  (from 1000 to ≈10 cm<SUP>-3</SUP>). This suggests that transverse ion
  heating is indeed a very strong mechanism for plasma density depletion
  in the topside ionosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electric fields derived from electron drift measurements
Authors: Kletzing, C. A.; Paschmann, G.; Boehm, M. H.; Haerendel, G.;
   Sckopke, N.; Baumjohann, W.; Torbert, R. B.; Marklund, G.; Lindqvist,
   P. -A.
1994GeoRL..21.1863K    Altcode:
  The first observations of electric fields derived from electron E ×
  B drift measurements aboard the Freja spacecraft are presented. The
  instrument injects a weak beam of 3 keV electrons and measures the
  displacement of the returning electrons after one gyroperiod. After
  removing effects due to beam-detector geometry and applying an empirical
  calibration based upon comparison with the computed υ × B electric
  field induced by the spacecraft motion, good agreement is found
  when the electron drift measurements are compared with the electric
  field components measured by the double probe experiment. Examples
  are presented in which moderately large electric fields are observed
  near the edges of or adjacent to electron precipitation regions with
  little or no electric field within.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Acceleration from Field-Aligned Potential Drops
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1994ApJS...90..765H    Altcode: 1994IAUCo.142..765H
  Unstable field-aligned currents are seen as the origin of field-aligned
  potential drops. They convert energy stored in magnetic shear stresses
  into kinetic energy. A good fraction of this energy is carried by
  runaway electrons and ions out of the acceleration region. The paper
  emphasizes the analogy with mechanical fractures. Simple expressions
  for the energy conversion rate and the parallel potential drop are
  derived, the two being linked by the critical current density needed
  for instability. The origin of the currents (generator) lies mostly in
  a region remote from that of energy conversion (fracture zone). The
  transmission of shear stresses and energy from the generator plasma,
  where the primary forces are applied to the fracture zone is also
  considered. A closed set of relations allows quantitative evaluation of
  the energetic particle production efficiency . The decoupling of the
  plasma on either side of the fracture zone which allows fast stress
  relief is described in detail, as well as a stationary model of the
  Alfven wave interaction between fracture zone and generator plasma. A
  simple concept of the nature of the anomalous resistivity generated by
  the unstable current leads to an expression for the magnetic diffusivity
  inside the fracture zone and an estimate of the latter's extent parallel
  to the magnetic field, whereas its width and length transverse to B
  follow from the macroscopic relations. Finally and as an example,
  the theory is applied to the problem of fast electron (and ion)
  acceleration well above 1 MeV seen to occur in many solar flares. It
  is obvious that this process belongs to the most powerful production
  processes of high-energy particles in stellar magnetic fields.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Numerical Simulation of Chromospheric Spicules Driven by
    Weakly-Damped Alfven Waves
Authors: de Pontieu, B.; Haerendel, G.
1994scs..conf..323D    Altcode: 1994IAUCo.144..323D
  The authors perform a time-dependent numerical simulation of the
  momentum transfer from weakly-damped Alfvén waves to the solar
  chromospheric plasma in a spatially expanding flux tube. The momentum
  transfer is due to the effect of ion-neutral collisions of Alfvén
  waves. By solving one-dimensional and time-dependent hydrodynamic
  equations, the authors study the formation of spicules.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: First high-resolution measurements by the Freja satellite.
Authors: Lundin, R.; Eliasson, L.; Norberg, O.; Marklund, G.; Zanetti,
   L. R.; Whalen, L. A.; Holback, B.; Murphree, J. S.; Haerendel, G.;
   Boehm, M.; Paschmann, G.
1994GMS....84..247L    Altcode:
  The joint Swedish-German Freja satellite was successfully launched on
  October 6, 1992. Freja contains an extensive set of plasma and field
  instruments for high time-resolution measurements of the auroral plasma
  in the altitude range 600 - 1750 km. The satellite also contains two UV
  imagers to monitor the auroral activity at the geomagnetic footprint of
  the satellite. In this paper the authors review the first few months of
  operation and the first scientific data from the Freja experiments. Of
  particular interest are the density cavities observed within the auroral
  energization region and the rather unique perspective obtained from
  the Freja orbit.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Incoherent scatter radar spectrum distortions from intense
    auroral turbulence
Authors: Knudsen, D. J.; Haerendel, G.; Buchert, S.; Kelley, M. C.;
   Steen, A.; Brandstrom, U.
1993JGR....98.9459K    Altcode:
  We present EISCAT (European Incoherent Scatter Radar Facility)
  measurements of &gt;2000 K enhancements of the apparent ion temperature
  which occurred simultaneously over a latitude range of at least 100
  km for brief periods (less than 1 min) in the auroral F region. One
  event occurred during a substorm onset and a second during passage of a
  westward-traveling surge. The apparent T<SUB>i</SUB> increases showed
  significant anisotropy, with measurements oriented less parallel to
  B<SUB>0</SUB> exhibiting the largest amount of apparent T<SUB>i</SUB>
  increase. In these examples the vector electric fields measured by
  EISCAT were much too low to account for the temperature increases
  via frictional heating, and also too low to generate non-Maxwellian
  ion velocity distributions, which can cause errors in ion temperature
  estimates. We argue that the measured T<SUB>i</SUB> increases are not
  real, and that both their magnitude and their anisotropy with respect
  to B<SUB>0</SUB> can be satisfactorily explained by turbulent plasma
  flows with peak amplitudes of ~2 km/s but which could not be directly
  resolved by EISCAT, because they varied with a time scale less than
  the 10-s integration period, or possibly because their scale size was
  smaller than the ~3-5 km antenna beam width. While such unresolved but
  inferred turbulent flows can themselves cause ion frictional heating,
  we show that an equally important cause of high T<SUB>i</SUB> estimates
  in our case was the distortion of the measured spectra by strongly
  varying Doppler shifts. We also present a counter example which shows
  a bright auroral arc in the radar common volume but with no large
  increases in the radar-measured T<SUB>i</SUB>, indicating that not all
  auroral structures are associated with electric fields which vary with
  sufficient intensity to distort incoherent scatter radar spectra.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the proper motion of auroral arcs
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Buchert, S.; La Hoz, C.; Raaf, B.; Rieger, E.
1993JGR....98.6087H    Altcode:
  The ability of the tristatic UHF radar of EISCAT to measure plasma
  velocities in the F region has been employed for the assessment of such
  motions in the proximity of and relative to auroral arcs. This required
  real-time tracking of the arcs with the radar upon command from the
  ground station monitoring the aurora. Slow relative motions of arc and
  plasma of the order of 30-90 m s<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>1</SUP> were deduced
  from the observations, but the error sources are considerable. Three
  cases are presented, representing different situations. The arc may
  move into an auroral current system or out of it. The first case
  corresponds to an energy reduction, the second to a build-up of the
  energy content of the current system. Oscillatory motions, alternating
  between these situations, exist. The oscillations lie in the Pc 5 range
  and testify for an interaction of the energy release region (auroral
  acceleration region) and the generator via shear Alfvén waves. The
  events are interpreted in the light of the “fracture model” of auroral
  arcs developed by the first author. Although relative motions of the
  observed magnitude are predicted by this theory, other explanations
  are conceivable.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Electron Drift Instrument for Cluster
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Melzner, F.; Haerendel, G.; Bauer, O. H.;
   Baumjohann, W.; Sckopke, N.; Treumann, R.; McIlwain, C. E.; Fillius,
   W.; Whipple, E. C.; Torbert, R. B.; Quinn, J. M.
1993ESASP1159..115P    Altcode: 1993cmps.book..115P
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Detection of optical emission in the area of G127.1+0.5.
Authors: Xilouris, K. M.; Papamastorakis, J.; Paleologou, E. V.;
   Andredakis, Y.; Haerendel, G.
1993A&A...270..393X    Altcode:
  Diffuse optical emission has been detected around the area of the
  galactic SNR G127.1+0.5 for the first time. Deep H-alpha CCD images have
  been used to identify the nebulosity that correlates with both the IR
  emission evident on the IRAS maps and the radio contours of the galactic
  remnant G127.1+0.5. The optical filaments of the known nearby remnant G
  126.2+1.6 have also been observed in order to evaluate the detection
  ability of our instrumental set-up. The intensity of the optical
  emission from the nebulosity has been determined by comparison with
  the standard star BD +28 deg 4211. The detection of the diffuse optical
  emission is established beyond doubt. The structure of the surrounding
  area is discussed and an attempt is made to identify the origin of
  the detected emission by studying this area at other wavelengths.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Weakly damped Alfvén waves as drivers of solar chromospheric
    spicules
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1992Natur.360..241H    Altcode:
  THE solar chromosphere, which separates the photosphere (temperature
  T ~ 6,400 K) from the hotter solar corona (T ~ 10<SUP>6</SUP> K),
  has a very inhomogeneous structure which is strongly influenced by
  the magnetic field. In the lowest 2,000 km of chromospheric altitude,
  the density falls by six orders of magnitude, and the temperature
  stays below 8,000 K. Above this altitude the transition to the corona
  is extremely irregular. It is dominated by spicules: thin (&lt;
  1,000 km) protrusions of cool chromospheric material which extend,
  with speeds of 25 km s<SUP>-1</SUP> and for durations of 5-10 min,
  up to 10,000 km into the corona with little change in density. Their
  origin is not yet understood, and I suggest here that the force that
  propels them against gravity may be the transfer of momentum from
  upward-moving Alfvén waves. In the upper chromosphere the ionized
  plasma component is collisionally coupled to the neutral gas, but the
  coupling is not perfect, so that the neutral material can acquire a net
  velocity with respect to the ionized component. This process is known
  to damp the Alfvén waves<SUP>12</SUP>, but I show that it can also,
  as the chromosphere peters out, transfer enough momentum to local
  volumes to create and drive the spicules.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Momentum transport through the chromosphere.
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1992ESASP.346...23H    Altcode: 1992ssts.rept...23H
  Chromosphere and ionosphere have in common that they contain weakly
  ionized plasmas. There are other similarities, but also striking
  differences. A most important one lies in the ratio of neutral-ion
  coupling time to the propagation time of an Alfvén wave through
  the respective regions. In the ionosphere this ratio is large,
  in the chromosphere very small. This has the consequence that only
  a.c. Pedersen currents exist in the latter region. Their properties
  are derived and their role for chromospheric heating and lifting
  of cool and dense plasma out of the chromosphere into the corona,
  to form spicules, is discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Theory for Modeling the Equatorial Evening Ionosphere and
    the Origin of the Shear in the Horizontal Plasma Flow
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Eccles, J. V.; Cakir, S.
1992JGR....97.1209H    Altcode:
  Companion papers in this series present (1) the role of equatorial
  E region postsunset ionosphere, (2) the origin of horizontal plasma
  shear flow in the postsunset equatorial ionosphere (this paper), (3)
  the Coloured Bubbles experiments results, and (4) computer simulations
  of artificial initiation of plasma density depletions (bubbles) in the
  equatorial ionosphere. Within this paper, equations describing the time
  evolution of the equatorial ionosphere are developed using flux tube
  integrated and flux weighted quantities which model the chemistry,
  dynamics, and electrodynamics of the equatorial ionosphere. The
  resulting two-dimensional set of equations can be used to investigate
  equatorial electric fields neglecting small-scale phenomena (λ&lt;1
  km). An immediate result derived from the integrated current equations
  is an equation describing the physics of the shear in the horizontal
  flow of the equatorial plasma during the evening hours. The profile of
  the horizontal flow has three important contributing terms relating to
  the neutral wind dynamo, Hall conduction, and the equatorial electrojet
  current divergence. Using a one-dimensional model of the velocity shear
  equation and the integrated ionospheric transport equations, a time
  history of the development of the shear feature during the postsunset
  hours is presented. The one-dimensional model results are compared to
  the velocity shear measurements from the Coloured Bubbles experiments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Role of the Equatorial Electrojet in the Evening Ionosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Eccles, J. V.
1992JGR....97.1181H    Altcode:
  This paper focuses on the role of the equatorial E region in
  the electrodynamics of the evening ionosphere. The influence and
  reaction of the electrojet current on the equatorial ionosphere at
  sunset is investigated using a field line integrated, one-dimensional,
  electrodynamic model. The one-dimensional, time-varying model predicts
  the divergence of the horizontal current of the equatorial electrojet
  for a given time variation of the horizontal electric field. The
  negative divergence of the horizontal current during the evening
  hours provides a net upward current out of the equatorial E region
  into the integrated ionosphere of higher equatorial altitudes (and
  equivalent latitudes). This upward current affects the vertical field
  magnitudes and subsequent horizontal plasma drifts of the overlying
  ionosphere. The model allows for chemical recombination and dynamic
  redistribution of ionization within the electrojet region under the
  assumption that the profile of the ionization density along a field
  line is proportional to the chemical equilibrium profile. <P />The
  eastward horizontal electric field and the net upward current during
  the 2 hours after sunset combine to light the ionization out of the E
  region in ionization densities less than the equilibrium values. As the
  ionization densities (conductivities) are reduced, the electrodynamics
  of the equatorial ionosphere is altered. This model of the equatorial
  electrojet current divergence can be used as a lower boundary to global,
  two-dimensional models of the equatorial electric fields. Finally,
  it is proposed that the equatorial electrojet current near sunset has
  a significant role in the determination of the postsunset enhancement
  of the horizontal electric field. The electrojet region provides the
  best avenue to be channeled from the dayside to meet the vertical
  current demands of the F region neutral wind dynamo after sunset. The
  conductivity reduction in the E region due to the recombination of
  ionization and the plasma uplift enhances the horizontal (eastward)
  electric field and thereby increases the speed of the uplift. Thus
  the dynamic adjustment of ionization has an unstable, feedback
  relationship with the electric fields which may explain the night to
  night variability of the horizontal electric field enhancement.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Modeling the Ionospheric Response to Artificially Produced
    Density Enhancements
Authors: Cakir, S.; Haerendel, G.; Eccles, J. V.
1992JGR....97.1193C    Altcode:
  The motion of plasma density enhancements (barium clouds) artificially
  introduced into the postsunset equatorial E region is investigated
  with a two-dimensional model incorporating flux tube integrated
  quantities. The temporal development of the ionosphere, in which the
  density perturbations are imbedded, is derived from a one-dimensional
  set of relations modeling plasma transport and the vertical electric
  field from initial conditions and a prescribed variation of the
  horizontal electric field as a function of time. The calculations show
  that the strong horizontal shear flows existing at the nighttime F
  region ledge (where the perturbations were placed) reduce the growth
  of polarization fields associated with the enhancements and adjacent
  relative depletions of plasma for weak perturbations. The reason
  is that the perturbations develop a strong tilt with respect to the
  horizontal. More massive density perturbations lead to stronger drop
  velocities with respect to the rising ambient plasma. At a later
  time they develop secondary horizontal density perturbations on the
  side unstable to E×B drift instability due to the motion of neutral
  constituents. When rising “bubbles” of low density are produced,
  they (1) form on the steepened eastward side of the enhancement
  perturbation, (2) have a width comparable to the scale of the
  enhancement perturbation, and (3) are most easily produced when the
  enhancement perturbation size is comparable to the scale height of the
  integrated density. These simulations show why experimental efforts
  of initiating rising bubbles and equatorial spread F have not been
  successful. The experiments require larger-scale and stronger density
  perturbations than what can be achieved with conventional sounding
  rocket releases of barium vapors.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Stimulated auroral precipitation by wave-particle interactions:
    Implications from the CRRES satellite mission
Authors: Schriver, David; Haerendel, Gerhard
1991JGR....9611403S    Altcode:
  The interaction of charged particles with plasma waves is one of the
  mechanisms which can cause the precipitation of energetic particles
  from the Earth's radiation belts. In the inner plasma sheet of the
  magnetotail, electromagnetic cyclotron waves can resonate with the bulk
  of the ambient energetic electron distribution only if an additional
  cold dense plasma population is present. In an attempt to artificially
  stimulated auroral electron precipitation, one experiment to be carried
  out during the Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite
  (CRRES) mission will be to release lithium close to the Earth's
  equatorial plane near geosynchronous orbit, along field lines that
  map to the diffuse auroral region. As the lithium is photoionized, a
  dense cold plasma cloud will be created within the background energetic
  population causing increased whistler wave growth. To support the CRRES
  Stimulated Electron Precipitation (STEP) experiment theoretically,
  a quantitative study is presented examining wave growth, propagation,
  and trapping of electromagnetic whistler waves within the released
  cold plasma cloud. Results show that for a background thermal electron
  temperature anisotropy of T<SUB>⊥</SUB>/T<SUB>∥</SUB>&gt;1.2,
  whistler wave growth rates are greatly increased by the presence of the
  cold electrons, and the waves can be trapped in the cloud. Because of
  a maserlike effect, intense standing waves with amplitudes the order
  of a few nanotesla will be generated within a frequency range of about
  50×500 Hertz. The waves will reach their largest amplitudes about 20
  s after release, causing strong electron pitch angle diffusion into the
  loss cone, which can be detected as enhanced diffuse aurora at Earth.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Interpretation of the electric fields measured in an
    ionospheric critical ionization velocity experiment
Authors: Brenning, N.; Fälthammar, C. -G.; Haerendel, G.; Kelley,
   M. C.; Marklund, G.; Pfaff, R.; Providakes, J.; Stenbaek-Nielsen,
   H. C.; Swenson, C.; Torbert, R.; Wescott, E. M.
1991JGR....96.9719B    Altcode:
  This paper deals with the quasi-dc electric fields measured in the
  CRITI ionospheric release experiment, which was launched from Wallops
  Island on May 13, 1986. The purpose of the experiment was to study the
  critical ionization velocity (CIV) mechanism in the ionosphere. Two
  identical barium shaped charges were fired from distances of 1.99 km
  and 4.34 km towards a main payload, which made full three-dimensional
  measurements of the electric field inside the streams. There was
  also a subpayload separated from the main payload by a couple of
  kilometers along the magnetic field. The relevance of earlier proposed
  mechanisms for electron heating in CIV is investigated in the light
  of the CRITI results. It is concluded that both the “homogeneous”
  and the “ionizing front” models probably apply, but in different
  parts of the stream. It is also possible that electrons are directly
  accelerated by a magnetic-field-aligned component of the electric field;
  the quasi-dc electric field observed within the streams had a large
  magnetic-field-aligned component, persisting on the time scale of the
  passage of the streams. The coupling between the ambient ionosphere and
  the ionized barium stream in CRITI was more complicated than is usually
  assumed in CIV theories, with strong magnetic-field-aligned electric
  fields and probably current limitation as important processes. One
  interpretation of the quasi-dc electric field data is that the
  internal electric fields of the streams were not greatly modified by
  magnetic-field-aligned currents, i.e., a state was established where the
  transverse currents were to a first approximation divergence-free. It
  is argued that this interpretation can explain both a reversal of the
  strong explosion-directed electric field in burst 1 and the absence
  of such a reversal in burst 2.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Optical observations on the CRIT-II Critical Ionization
    Velocity Experiment
Authors: Stenbaek-Nielsen, H. C.; Wescott, E. M.; Haerendel, G.;
   Valenzuela, A.
1990GeoRL..17.1601S    Altcode:
  A rocket borne Critical lonization Velocity (CTV) experiment was
  carried out from Wallops Island at dusk on May 4, 1989. Two barium
  shaped charges were released below the solar terminator (to prevent
  photoionization) at altitudes near 400 km. The ambient ionospheric
  electron density was 5×10<SUP>5</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>. The neutral
  barium jet was directed upwards and at an angle of nominally 45 degrees
  to B which gives approximately 3×10<SUP>23</SUP> neutrals with super
  critical velocity. Ions created by a QV process in the region of the
  neutral jet would travel up along B into sunlight where they can be
  detected optically. Weïï defined ion clouds (max. brightness 750 R)
  were observed in both releases. An ionization rate of 0.8%s<SUP>-1</SUP>
  (125s ionization time constant) can account for the observed ion cloud
  near the release field line» but the ionization rate falls off with
  increasing distance from the release. It is concluded that a CIV process
  was present in the neutral jet out to about 50 km from the release,
  which is significantly further than allowed by current theories.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A model for the electric fields and currents during a strong
    Ps 6 pulsation event
Authors: Buchert, S.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.
1990JGR....95.3733B    Altcode:
  On April 21, 1985, an intense Ps 6 pulsation event was observed with
  the EISCAT radar and the EISCAT magnetometer cross. These measurements
  serve as a reference for a new electrostatic model for the ionospheric
  conductances, electric fields, and currents of the auroral structures
  associated with the pulsations, whose auroral signatures are the
  Ω bands. All parameters are essentially derived from the input
  field-aligned current distribution. By varying this distribution and a
  few free parameters in the relation between the conductances and the
  upward current, the model is adjusted to the data. We find that by
  a rearrangement of the upward current from a one-dimensional sheet
  configuration to tongelike poleward extensions the observed event
  is reproduced in a satisfactory way. Compared to previous works,
  the Hall current is modulated in a different, less symmetric way,
  and considerably lower field-aligned current densities are required.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Climatological distribution of planetary waves in the middle
    atmosphere
Authors: Brenning, N.; Faelthammar, C. -G.; Marklund, G.; Haerendel,
   G.; Kelley, M.; Pfaff, R.
1990AdSpR..10g..63B    Altcode: 1990AdSpR..10...63B
  In the rocket experiment CRIT I, launched from Wallops Island on
  May 13, 1986, two identical Barium-shaped charges were fired from
  distances of 1.3 km and 3.6 km towards the main experiment payload,
  which was separated from a sub-payload by a couple of km along the
  magnetic field. The relevance of earlier proposed mechanisms for
  electron heating in ionospheric critical velocity experiments is
  investigated in the light of the CRIT I results. It is concluded
  that both the 'homogeneous' and the 'ionizing front' models can be
  applied, in different parts of the stream. It is also possible that
  a third, entirely different, mechanism may contribute to the electron
  heating. This mechanism involves direct energization of electrons in
  the magnetic-field-aligned component of the dc electric field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electrodynamic interaction between the CRIT I ionized barium
    streams and the ambient ionosphere
Authors: Brenning, N.; Fälthammar, C. -G.; Haerendel, G.; Kelley,
   M.; Marklund, G.; Providakes, J.; Stenbaek-Nielsen, H. C.; Swensson,
   C.; Torbert, R. B.; Wescott, E. M.
1990AdSpR..10g..67B    Altcode: 1990AdSpR..10R..67B
  In the CRIT I Critical Velocity experiment, launched from Wallops
  Island on 13 May, 1986, two fast barium streams were ejected by means
  of shaped charges. Their electrodynamic interaction with the ambient
  ionosphere is discussed. An outstanding feature of the DC electric
  field observed within the streams was a large magnetic-field-aligned
  component, persisting on the time scale of the passage of the
  streams. One interpretation of the DC electric field data is that the
  internal electric fields of the streams is not greatly modified by
  Birkeland currents, i.e. a state is established, where the transverse
  currents are to a first approximation divergence-free. It is argued
  that this interpretation can explain why a reversal of the strong
  explosion-directed electric field was observed in the first explosion
  but not in the second (more distant one).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dynamics of a barium release in the magnetospheric tail
Authors: Mende, S. B.; Swenson, G. R.; Geller, S. P.; Doolittle,
   J. H.; Haerendel, G.; Valenzuela, A.; Bauer, O. H.
1989JGR....9417063M    Altcode:
  The second magnetospheric tail Ba release of the AMPTE program on
  May 13, 1985, was observed by several field stations. A Fabry-Perot
  imager was operated at Mt. Hamilton, California, to measure the
  line-of-sight velocity of the barium ions in the tail. Simultaneous
  imaging observations were made from there and from El Leoncito in
  Argentina. From the two-station imaging data sets we have obtained
  cloud position by triangulation. The ion cloud bulk velocity was
  obtained from the position measurements and was intercompared with the
  Fabry-Perot direct velocity measurements. The triangulated barium ion
  cloud appeared to be field aligned, and its triangulated direction
  was in excellent agreement with the Tsyganenko-Usmanov magnetic
  field model. Following the initial expansion phase and the magnetic
  cavity formation, the barium cloud became magnetized by the ambient
  magnetospheric magnetic field. The bulk of the ion cloud was moving
  very slowly compared to the ambient ion velocity, which was measured
  by the nearby IRM satellite and which was of the order of several
  hundred kilometers per second. The slow motion of the barium ions was
  attributed to an “electrostatic cavity” formation at the boundary
  of the high-density cloud, which excluded the ambient electric field
  by polarization. Several morphological changes of the ion cloud were
  obsevbed during the following period, which resulted in the bifurcation
  of the cloud and the formation of a distinct S shape. Thus the cloud
  appeared to exclude the ambient convection electric fields, and at
  the same time it remained responsive to some time-dependent field
  configuration changes. Thirty-five minutes after cloud release, the
  cloud suddenly brightened and accelerated in the antisunward direction,
  tending to take up the local plasma velocity. This acceleration
  coincided with an increase in the ambient magnetic field and the plasma
  velocity. There was no clear evidence that the change in the ambient
  conditions was a direct cause of the observed cloud behavior.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Cosmic linear accelerators.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1989plap.work...37H    Altcode:
  The existence of field-aligned potential drops is related to unstable
  field-aligned currents. It is postulated that the region of instability,
  once set up, can propagate spontaneously into the interior of the
  current circuit, like a fracture in a stressed solid body, and thus
  achieve a fast magnetic stress relief. Most of the released magnetic
  energy is converted into kinetic energy of field-aligned particle
  beams. Parallel voltage and energy flux depend on the primary magnetic
  stress, the propagation properties of shear Alfvén-waves, and the
  threshold for current instability. Numerical examples for the efficiency
  of such an acceleration process are given for three cosmical situations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Three-dimensional plasma structures with anomalous flow
    directions near the Earth's bow shock
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Haerendel, G.; Sckopke, N.; Möbius, E.;
   Lühr, H.; Carlson, C. W.
1988JGR....9311279P    Altcode:
  We have examined AMPTE IRM data obtained in the solar wind near the
  Earth's bow shock and found 16 well-defined cases where a region of
  hot subsonic plasma is embedded in the solar wind. Such structures had
  been observed first with instruments on ISEE 1 and 2 and later on AMPTE
  UKS and distinguished from bow shock crossing. Our observations confirm
  some of the earlier findings, notably the event profile, showing a hot,
  low-density core flanked by narrow regions of high density and strong
  magnetic field. We also find the low (~200 km/s) flow velocities,
  strongly deflected from the solar wind, and we substantially strengthen
  the local time dependence of the flow which invariably is directed
  dawnward from prenoon events and duskward for postnoon events. Our
  results differ from the reported ISEE results in two respects. First,
  the flows we observe tend to have larger angles relative to the solar
  wind, and they often even have a sunward component. Second, the events
  we have selected cannot be described as diamagnetic cavities. <P
  />On the contrary, the magnetic fields are usually significantly
  enhanced. This apparent discrepancy may simply result from different
  event selection criteria. A quantitative analysis of the regions
  flanking the hot core shows they consist of fast, nearly perpendicular,
  supercritical shocks on the outside and tangential discontinuities on
  the inside. We find a systematic difference between the orientations
  of the leading and trailing edge boundary normals. While the former are
  directed largely transverse to the solar wind flow, the latter are more
  aligned with the solar wind. Another new finding concerns the presence
  of enhanced fluxes of &gt;70-keV nearly electrons which appear to be
  of magnetospheric origin. The majority of events are associated with
  directional discontinuities in the interplanetary magnetic field. We
  have also found events which are not embedded in the solar wind but
  occur between the solar wind and the magnetosheath, at times replacing
  the regular bow shock. Among the mechanisms discussed as causes for
  these events are the formation of sunward directed plasma jets from
  magnetopause reconnection, or from amplification of magnetic stresses
  associated with rotational discontinuities in the interplanetary
  medium; sudden and localized enhancements of bow shock reflection;
  and the interaction of the bow shock with tangential discontinuities
  having a specific internal structure.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral arcs as manifestations of magnetic fractures.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1988aaam.book.....H    Altcode:
  Properties of structured auroral arcs are derived from a model
  according to which magnetic energy is dominantly converted into kinetic
  energy of field-aligned particle beams. After a summary of the main
  features of the fracture model, the author addresses the relative
  and absolute transverse scale lengths implied by this model. Then he
  looks into the impact of the interaction between emitted Alfvén waves
  and current generator on the structure of auroral arcs. He checks
  the appropriateness of the used macroscopic description vis-à-vis
  kinetic effects and presents an attempt to reconcile the current
  instability/Alfvén wave picture with the mirror resistivity concept.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetometer and incoherent scatter observations of an intense
    Ps 6 pulsation event
Authors: Buchert, S.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.; La Hoz, C.;
   Luehr, H.
1988JATP...50..357B    Altcode:
  A Ps 6 pulsation event during the recovery phase of a geomagnetic storm
  in the morning sector of April 21, 1985 was recorded by the EISCAT
  magnetometer cross in northern Scandinavia. Simultaneous measurements of
  E- and F-region plasma parameters were taken by the EISCAT incoherent
  scatter radar with a latitudinal scanning program. Electric fields
  and height-integrated Hall and Pedersen conductivities are derived and
  two-dimensional patterns of these quantities are constructed for one Ps
  6 period. The observations can be explained by the ionospheric current
  and electric field model suggested by Opgenoorth et al. (1983) which
  includes the effects of both electric fields and conductance variations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The duskside plasmapause/ring current interface: Convection
    and plasma wave observations
Authors: LaBelle, J.; Treumann, R. A.; Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel,
   G.; Sckopke, N.; Paschmann, G.; Lühr, H.
1988JGR....93.2573L    Altcode:
  Three time intervals have been selected during which the Active
  Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) Irm satellite traversed
  the plasmapause around 2130, 1900, and 1730 LT. The cold plasma density
  is monitored with the wave experiment whose frequency range includes the
  upper hybrid and the plasma frequencies; in this manner, the plasmapause
  is easily observed as a reduction in the plasma density from 10-100
  cm<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>3</SUP> to 0-5 cm<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>3</SUP>. The AMPTE
  IRM three-dimensional plasma instrument detects ions in the energy range
  20 eV to 40 keV and allows the determination of the inner edge of the
  ring current ions, which penetrate the duskside plasmapause by 0.5-2
  R<SUB>E</SUB>. <P />This boundary is characterized by termination
  of the plasmaspheric hiss and an outward pointing gradient in the
  energetic ions. Another signature of this boundary is an eastward
  current which is detectable by the plasma instrument as well as the
  magnetometer; this current is consistent in direction and magnitude
  with the diamagnetic current associted with the observed gradient in
  the ring current ions. In two of the three cases, current-driven lower
  hybrid waves occur. On all three days, the ring current overlap with the
  plasmasphere is marked by sunward convection (opposite to corotation)
  and by a plateau formation in the density profile, both of which
  indicate that the ring current has a significant effect on the electric
  field. On one of the three days (June 6, 1985), the region where the
  ring current overlaps the plasmasphere is marked by electromagnetic
  waves with frequencies below the local helium gyrofrequency. These
  waves appear to be about an equal mix of the left-hand-polarized L
  mode and the right-hand-polarized R mode ion cyclotron waves and seem
  to support the general explanation of such low-frequency waves based
  on GEOS and ATS observations. <P />On all three days, the overlap
  region is populated by magnetic pulsations with periods of the order
  of minutes. These are accompanied by fluctuations in the cold plasma
  density which are in phase with the compressional part of the pulsations
  and seem roughly consistent with adiabatic variation in the cold plasma
  density in response to the changes in the field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observation of nonlinear wave decay processes in the solar
    wind by the AMPTE IRM plasma wave experiment
Authors: Koons, H. C.; Roeder, J. L.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.;
   Treumann, R.
1988STIN...8823713K    Altcode:
  Nonlinear wave decay processes have been detected in the solar wind
  by the plasma wave experiment aboard the AMPTE-IRM spacecraft. The
  main process is generation of ultra-low-frequency ion-acoustic
  waves from the decay of Langmuir waves near the electron plasma
  frequency. Frequently this is accomplished by an enhancement of
  emissions near twice the plasma frequency. This enhancement is
  most likely due to the generation of electromagnetic waves from the
  coalescence of two Langmuir waves. These processes occur within the
  electron foreshock in front of the earth's bow shock.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A model for transient electric fields associated with chemical
    release experiments by rockets
Authors: Marklund, G.; Brenning, N.; Holmgren, G.; Haerendel, G.
1988AdSpR...8a..85M    Altcode: 1988AdSpR...8R..85M
  As a follow-up to the chemical release experiment Trigger in 1977,
  the TOR rocket was launched from Esrange on 24 October 1984. A large
  amplitude electric field pulse of 250 mV/m was detected shortly after
  the explosion. The central part of the pulse was found to be clearly
  correlated with an intense layer of swept up ambient particles behind a
  propagating shockfront. The field was directed towards the centre of the
  expanding ionized cloud, which is indicative of a polarisation electric
  field source. An expression for this radial polarisation field is
  derived and found to result in an excellent agreement with observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ionospheric response to chemical releases in the high latitude
    E and F regions
Authors: Holmgren, G.; Marklund, G.; Eliasson, L.;
   Opgenoorthf. Söraas, H.; Primdahl, F.; Haerendel, G.; Kintner, P. M.
1988AdSpR...8a..79H    Altcode: 1988AdSpR...8...79H
  The release of dense chemical clouds in the ionosphere has strong
  influence on the electric field, plasma waves, and the energetic and
  thermal plasma. The observed effects are associated with the expanding
  neutral gas and with the localized conductivity enhancement caused
  by the ionized cloud. We report the first results of an experiment
  (Tor) performed at Esrange in October 1984. The observations are
  compared with observations made in a similar experiment (Trigger) in
  September 1977. In both experiments, strong electric field pulses were
  observed immediately after the releases. Also, in both experiments,
  enhanced energetic electron flux associated with the releases were
  observed. However, the details of the energetic electron response
  differ between the two experiments. This paper gives an overview of
  the experiment and the associated Eiscat measurements. Details of the
  observed electric field and particle observations are discussed in
  separate papers.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Active experiments. Proceedings of Symposium 1 of the COSPAR
    Twenty-sixth Plenary Meeting, held in Toulouse, France, 30th June -
    11th July 1986.
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Mendillo, M.
1988AdSpR...8a....H    Altcode: 1988AdSpR...8Q....H
  Recent investigations of the thermosphere, ionosphere, magnetosphere,
  and solar wind by means of active experiments are examined in reviews
  and reports. Topics discussed include plasma and neutral-gas injections,
  electron- and ion-beam injections, vehicle-environment interactions,
  and active wave experiments. Particular attention is given to the
  results of the AMPTE experiments, computer simulations of ion-beam
  propagation, the Charge-2 tethered rocket experiment, opportunities
  for active wave experiments on the Space Station, and the physical
  processes involved in ionospheric-heating experiments.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A substorm resulting from energy storage in the magnetosphere
Authors: Jorgensen, T. S.; Lassen, K.; Heikkila, W. J.; Wickwar,
   V. B.; Haerendel, G.
1987AnGeo...5..511J    Altcode:
  In order to study the problem whether magnetospheric substorms are
  directly driven by solar wind energy or result from unloading of
  such energy temporarily stored in the magnetosphere, it is necessary
  to investigate substorms following long quiescent periods and to
  observe solar wind parameters in proximity to the magnetosphere as
  well as many high-latitude ionospheric parameters with good temporal
  resolution. This study presents such observations obtained on November
  29, 1984 by the AMPTE-IRM spacecraft just outside the bow shock and by
  the Sondrestrom incoherent scatter radar plus several other instruments
  in the earth's polar region. It is inferred from the observations that
  solar wind energy was accumulated during a one to two hour period in
  the magnetosphere before being unloaded and dissipated in the polar
  ionosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the potential role of concentrated field-aligned currents
    in solarphysics.
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1987ESASP.275..205H    Altcode: 1987sspp.symp..205H
  The consequences of the existence of intense field-aligned currents
  on energy storage and dissipation in the solar atmosphere are
  investigated. Joule heating may be the reason for the chromospheric
  network as seen in H alpha and for plages in active regions. A wide
  range of Ohmic dissipation rates can exist without altering the local
  chromospheric temperature by more than a factor of two. Generation
  of narrow current tubes by turbulent motions in and below the
  photosphere could provide the energy to the corona released during
  flares. The primary energy release during these events could proceed
  by untwisting of the flux tubes. The high and strongly inhomogeneous
  pressure distribution set up in the corona as a result of reconnection
  in multiple narrow current sheets can act as generator of even more
  intense currents (up to 1000 a/sqm A/m2). They generate the low
  temperature flare by classical Joule heating of the chromosphere
  and particle beams greater than 100 MeV by linear acceleration in
  localized field-aligned potential drops, which may be preferentially
  set up below the transition region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma Transport Near the Magnetic Cavity Surrounding Comet
    Halley
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1987GeoRL..14..673H    Altcode:
  The dominant forces resisting the transport of magnetic field into
  the inner coma of a comet are ion mass loading from and friction
  with the expanding neutral atmosphere. A magnetic cavity is thereby
  created. Close to it the frictional force is most important. Careful
  interpretation of the magnetic field profile measured during the
  Giotto flyby of comet P/Halley reveals the existence of an inward
  directed component of plasma flow of a few km/s, which drops to zero
  at the boundary of the cavity. The energy transferred from the neutral
  gas to the plasma by friction and mass loading is responsible for the
  strongly elevated ion temperatures outside the magnetic cavity. Fitting
  of the observed magnetic profile and ion temperature distribution yields
  quantitative determinations of some crucial parameters of the coma.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations and theory of the AMPTE magnetotail barium
    releases
Authors: Bernhardt, P. A.; Roussel-Dupre, R. A.; Pongratz, M. B.;
   Haerendel, G.; Valenzuela, A.; Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.
1987JGR....92.5777B    Altcode:
  The barium releases in the magnetotail during the Active Magnetospheric
  Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) operation were monitored by
  ground-based imagers and by instruments on the Ion Release Module. After
  each release, the data show the formation of a structured diamagnetic
  cavity. The cavity grows until the dynamic pressure of the expanding
  ions balances the magnetic pressure on its surface. The magnetic field
  inside the cavity is zero. The barium ions collect on the surface of the
  cavity, producing a shell. Plasma irregularities form along magnetic
  field lines draped over the surface of the cavity. The scale size of
  the irregularities is nearly equal to the thickness of the shell. The
  evolution and structuring of the diamagnetic cavity are modeled using
  magnetohydrodynamics theory.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electron cyclotron harmonic waves observed by the AMPTE-IRM
    plasma wave experiment following a lithium release in the solar wind
Authors: Roeder, J. L.; Koons, H. C.; Holzworth, R. H.; Anderson,
   R. R.; Gurnett, D. A.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.; Häusler, B.;
   Treumann, R.
1987JGR....92.5768R    Altcode:
  An unexpected occurrence following the second lithium release by
  the AMPTE-IRM spacecraft in the solar wind on September 20, 1984,
  was the appearance of electron cyclotron harmonic emissions. These
  emissions began about 50 s after the release and continued for several
  minutes. Narrow-band emissions polarized perpendicular to the magnetic
  field with amplitudes of approximately 10<SUP>-5</SUP> V m<SUP>-1</SUP>
  were observed in each of the first five harmonic bands. Unpolarized
  diffuse emissions were also present at the same time. The diffuse
  emissions extended from below the lowest measured frequency channel to
  above the highest narrow-band emission with a maximum below the electron
  cyclotron frequency. It will be shown that these observations are
  inconsistent with their generation by several ion beam instabilities.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observation of nonlinear wave decay processes in the solar
    wind by the AMPTE IRM plasma wave experiment
Authors: Koons, H. C.; Roeder, J. L.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.;
   Treumann, R.; Anderson, R. R.; Gurnett, D. A.; Holzworth, R. H.
1987JGR....92.5865K    Altcode:
  Nonlinear wave decay processes have been detected in the solar wind by
  the plasma wave experiment aboard the Active Magnetospheric Particle
  Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) IRM spacecraft. The main process is the
  generation of ultralow-frequency ion acoustic waves from the decay of
  Langmuir waves near the electron plasma frequency. Frequently, this
  is accompanied by an enhancement of emissions near twice the plasma
  frequency. This enhancement is most likely due to the generation of
  electromagnetic waves from the coalescence of two Langmuir waves. These
  processes occur within the electron foreshock in front of the earth's
  bow shock.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: AMPTE IRM Observations of waves associated with flux transfer
    events in the magnetosphere
Authors: LaBelle, J.; Treumann, R. A.; Haerendel, G.; Bauer, O. H.;
   Paschmann, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Lühr, H.; Anderson, R. R.; Koons,
   H. C.; Holzworth, R. H.
1987JGR....92.5827L    Altcode:
  The AMPTE IRM wave instrument has been applied to the study of flux
  transfer events (FTE's). This initial investigation concentrates on
  FTE's observed in the magnetosphere during the fall of 1984. The wave
  morphology consists of four significant features: at frequencies below
  the ion gyrofrequency, magnetic fluctuations occur with amplitudes of
  the order of 1 nT; at frequencies from a few hertz to a few hundred
  hertz, electric field fluctuations are observed which have a broadband
  amplitude of a few millivolts per meter, which are perpendicularly
  polarized at the lowest frequencies, and which are partly electrostatic
  and partly electromagnetic; in the frequency range from 100 Hz to 10
  kHz, broadband spikelike waves occur with a time-averaged amplitude
  of about 0.1 mV/m; and near the electron plasma frequency, bursts
  of waves occur at the boundaries of FTE's. In none of the 25 events
  surveyed does the total broadband amplitude of all the waves exceed
  a few millivolts per meter, an amplitude far too small to provide
  the dissipation required by “traditional” reconnection models
  in which the dissipation region has a thickness the order of an ion
  gyroradius. Thus, either all of the FTE's are observed at some distance
  from the difusion region, or the observable waves play no significant
  role in the diffusion process, or “traditional” reconnection models
  do not apply to reconnection in FTE's.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On transient electric fields observed in chemical release
    experiments by rockets
Authors: Marklund, G.; Brenning, N.; Holmgren, G.; Haerendel, G.
1987JGR....92.4590M    Altcode:
  As a follow-up to the successful chemical release experiment Trigger in
  1977, the Trigger Optimized Repetition rocket was launched from Esrange
  on October 24, 1984. As in the Trigger experiment, a large-amplitude
  electric field pulse of 200 mV/m was detected shortly after the
  explosion. The central part of the pulse was found to be clearly
  correlated with an intense layer of swept up ambient particles behind
  a propagating shock front. The field was directed toward the center
  of the expanding ionized cloud, which is indicative of a polarization
  electric field source. Expressions for this radial polarization field
  and the much weaker azimuthal-induced electric field are derived from
  a simple cylindrical model for the field and the expanding neutral
  cloud. Time profiles of the radial electric field are shown to be in
  good agreement with observations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Entry and dissipation of energy in the Earth's magnetosphere
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.
1987ESASP.268..121B    Altcode: 1987sass.conf..121B
  After a brief overview on topography and the flow of energy in
  the earth's magnetosphere the authors will first focus on the
  different processes by which solar wind energy enters the earth's
  magnetosphere. Subsequently they will discuss some aspects of that
  process by which most of this energy is dissipated, namely the
  magnetospheric substorm.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Erdmagnetismus und extraterrestrische Vorgänge
Authors: Baumjohann, Wolfgang; Haerendel, Gerhard
1987NW.....74..181B    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Das "Short Wavelength Spectrometer (SWS)" für das "Infrared
    Space Observatory ISO"
Authors: Drapatz, S. W.; Genzel, R.; Haerendel, G.; Haser, L.;
   Katterloher, R.; Melzner, F.; Stöcker, J.; de Graauw, Th.; Beintema,
   D. A.; Luinge, W.; Ploeger, G.; Wesselius, P. R.; Wildeman, K.;
   Wijnbergen, J.; Kamperman, Th. M.; van der Hucht, K. A.; van
   Dijkhuizen, C. A. W.
1987MitAG..68..201D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The short-wavelength spectrometer for ISO (Poster)
Authors: de Graauw, Th.; Beintema, D. A.; Luinge, W.; Ploeger, G.;
   Wesselius, P. R.; Wildeman, K.; Wijnbergen, J.; Drapatz, S. W.; Genzel,
   R.; Haerendel, G.; Haser, L.; Katterloher, R.; Melzner, F.; Stöcker,
   J.; Kamperman, Th. M.; van der Hucht, K. A.; van Dijkhuizen, W. C. A.
1987iawa.conf..438D    Altcode:
  The Short-Wavelength Spectrometer for ISO comprises two grating
  spectrometers with a resolving power of 1000 in the range 2.3 to 45
  μm. Fabry-Perot etalons can boost the resolution to 30,000 in the
  range 15 to 35 μm. The baseline detector configuration has Si:In,
  Si:Ga, Si:P and Ge:Be detectors from the Battelle-Institut.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Active plasma experiments.
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1987swe..conf..214H    Altcode:
  Contents: Comets. Barium. Motions. Ion jets. Structure. Space as a
  laboratory. Stimulation of equatorial spread-F. Critical velocity
  ionization. Artificial comets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Tail exploration and tail formation with artificial plasma
    clouds
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1987magp.book..337H    Altcode:
  The formation processes of cometlike tails in barium releases in
  the solar wind are considered. The momentum coupling between the
  two plasmas is studied from an MHD and a one-particle point of view,
  respectively. The formation of a tail is believed to be a consequence
  of momentum balance leading to ion injection from the rear side of
  the plasma cloud in the downstream direction. It is noted that other
  processes contributing to the formation and dynamics of the tail are ion
  drag along the magnetic field due to the expansion of a heated electron
  component and separations of magnetic substructures from the comet head.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Waves and electric fields associated with the first AMPTE
    artificial comet
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.; Ma, T. Z.; Haerendel, G.;
   Paschmann, G.; Bauer, O. H.; Treumann, R. A.; Koons, H. C.; Holzworth,
   R. H.; Lühr, H.
1986JGR....9110013G    Altcode:
  A variety of plasma wave and electric field effects were observed
  during the AMPTE (Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers)
  solar wind barium release on December 27, 1984. Electron plasma
  oscillations provided measurements of the electron density during
  the entire event. Inside the diamagnetic cavity created by the ion
  cloud, the electron density reached a peak of about 2×10<SUP>5</SUP>
  cm<SUP>-3</SUP> and then decreased approximately as t<SUP>-2</SUP>
  as the cloud expanded. A static electric field of about 1-2 mV/m
  was detected in the diamagnetic cavity. This electric field is in
  the same direction as the solar wind electric field, suggesting
  that the solar wind electric field may be able to penetrate into the
  cloud. As the spacecraft passed through the boundary of the diamagnetic
  cavity, a region of compressed plasma and magnetic field was detected
  upstream of the ion cloud with a peak density of about 10<SUP>4</SUP>
  cm<SUP>-3</SUP> and magnetic field strength of 130 nT. This region of
  compressed plasma is believed to be caused by solar wind plasma and
  magnetic field lines draped around the nose of the ion cloud. Inside the
  diamagnetic cavity, electrostatic emissions were observed in a narrow
  band centered on the barium ion plasma frequency and in another band
  at lower frequencies. These waves are believed to be short-wavelength
  ion acoustic waves. Bursts of electrostatic waves were also observed
  at the boundaries of the diamagnetic cavity, apparently caused by
  an electron drift current along the boundary. An intense burst of
  broadband electrostatic noise was observed near the outer boundary of
  the plasma compression region with intensities of up to 140 mV/m. This
  noise is apparently associated with a shocklike interaction between
  the ion cloud and the solar wind. Growth rate computations show that
  the noise can be accounted for by an electrostatic ion beam-plasma
  interaction between the nearly stationary barium ions and the rapidly
  moving solar wind protons.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Complementary analysis and interpretation of the shocklike
    electrostatic noise observed during the AMPTE solar wind lithium
    releases
Authors: Brinca, A. L.; Moreira, A. A.; Serra, F. M.; Haerendel, G.;
   Paschmann, G.
1986JGR....9110167B    Altcode:
  The original interpretation of the electrostatic noise observed
  during the AMPTE solar wind lithium releases is complemented to
  clarify the nature of the intervening instabilities, the role of the
  particle populations on wave excitation, and the generation of the
  higher-frequency (a few kilohertz) noise. The results suggest that
  the lower frequencies are created by an electron beam instability
  providing growth within a broad range of wave vector directions,
  whereas a negative-energy, slow proton beam mode might contribute to
  the existence of the higher noise frequencies.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electric field measurements during the Condor critical
    velocity experiment
Authors: Kelley, M. C.; Pfaff, R. F.; Haerendel, G.
1986JGR....91.9939K    Altcode:
  The barium explosion of the Condor critical velocity experiment created
  a complex electric field pulse detected in situ by a single-axis
  electric field double probe on a separate spacecraft a few kilometers
  away. The measured component of the pulse had a peak amplitude which
  exceeded 320 m V/m. The sign of this component was consistent with
  an electric field pointed back toward the explosion point. The large
  electric field pulse arrived nearly simultaneously with the fastest
  minor ions associated with the explosion. Just ahead of the pulse a
  packet of nearly monochromatic waves (3460 Hz) was detected near the
  oxygen lower hybrid frequency, with a measured electric field component
  of 6 mV/m along the double-probe direction. The bulk of the barium
  beam was accompanied by a quasi-dc electric field whose amplitude
  was between 100 and 200 mV/m. The E×B drift associated with this
  latter field was less than the speed of the main beam estimated fom
  the time delay of the arrival of the initial beam-related waves and
  particles. This implies a counterstreaming between the neutrals and
  ions in excess of the critical ionization velocity for barium. This
  region of the beam was accompanied by a peaked distribution in the soft
  electron fluxes and by intense electric field fluctuations with peak
  (one component) amplitudes exceeding 375 mV/m. The wave frequencies
  were in the range 0.1f<SUB>LH</SUB>&lt;=f&lt;=f<SUB>LH</SUB>
  where f<SUB>LH</SUB> is the barium lower hybrid frequency
  ((Ω<SUB>i</SUB>Ω<SUB>e</SUB>)<SUP>1/2</SUP>/2π). <P />The most
  significant electron heating was associated with the most intense wave
  activity. The observations provide evidence of several important links
  which may be required in the critical velocity chain and are consistent
  with theories which appeal to either the modified two-stream instability
  or to an ion beam process. For example, the data support the hypothesis
  that mechanical energy in the beam is converted to electrical energy
  associated with cross-field currents and that these currents are
  unstable to lower hybrid wave generation which subsequently heats
  the electron gas. In principle, the electrons then ionize the neutral
  gas to complete the loop. The observed (one component) lower hybrid
  electric field wave intensity was less than that predicted for a fully
  developed modified two-stream instability, which may be related to
  the fact that the fastest-growing modes are inhibited by the finite
  dimension of the beam parallel to the magnetic field. In turn, the
  reduction in the observed lower hybrid wave amplitude may be related
  to the low efficiency of the Alfvén process in the Condor experiment
  geometry reported in the companion papers.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma waves associated with the first AMPTE magnetotail
    barium release
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.; Bernhardt, P. A.; Lühr,
   H.; Haerendel, G.; Bauer, O. H.; Koons, H. C.; Holzworth, R. H.
1986GeoRL..13..644G    Altcode:
  Plasma waves observed during the March 21, 1985, AMPTE magnetotail
  barium release are described. Electron plasma oscillations provided
  local measurements of the plasma density during both the expansion and
  decay phases. Immediately after the explosion the electron density
  reached a peak of about 4 × 10<SUP>5</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>, and
  then started decreasing approximately as t<SUP>-2.4</SUP> as the
  cloud expanded. About 6 minutes after the explosion the electron
  density suddenly began to increase, reached a secondary peak of
  about 2.4 × 10² cm<SUP>-3</SUP>, and then slowly decayed down to
  the pre-event level over a period of about 15 minutes. The density
  increase is believed to be caused by the collapse of the ion cloud
  into the diamagnetic cavity created by the initial expansion. The
  plasma wave intensities observed during the entire event were quite
  low. In the diamagnetic cavity electrostatic emissions were observed
  near the barium ion plasma frequency, and in another band at lower
  frequencies. A broadband burst of electrostatic noise was also observed
  at the boundary of the diamagnetic cavity. Except for electron plasma
  oscillations no significant wave activity was observed outside of the
  diamagnetic cavity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ion flow at comet Halley
Authors: Johnstone, A.; Coates, A.; Kellock, S.; Wilken, B.; Jockers,
   K.; Rosenbauer, H.; Studemann, W.; Weiss, W.; Formisano, V.; Amata,
   E.; Cerulli-Irelli, R.; Dobrowolny, M.; Terenzi, R.; Egidi, A.; Borg,
   H.; Hultquist, B.; Winningham, J.; Gurgiolo, C.; Bryant, D.; Edwards,
   T.; Feldman, W.; Thomsen, M.; Wallis, M. K.; Biermann, L.; Schmidt,
   H.; Lust, R.; Haerendel, G.; Paschmann, G.
1986Natur.321..344J    Altcode:
  The three-dimensional positive ion analyser aboard the Giotto
  spacecraft has been used to study the interaction between protons
  and α-particles in the solar wind and positive ions from comet
  Halley. Although the first impression of the overall structure is that
  the plasma flow evolves smoothly as the nucleus is approached, three
  sharp transitions of relatively small amplitude can be identified on
  both the inbound and outbound legs of the trajectory. The outermost
  one, at ~10<SUP>6</SUP> km from the nucleus, appears to be a multiple
  crossing of a weak bow shock. The innermost one, at 80,000 km, is the
  boundary where the flowing plasma becomes depleted. On a microscopic
  scale, the turbulence created by the interaction between the two ion
  populations extends to a distance of several million kilometres from
  the nucleus. At Giotto's closest approach to the nucleus, the plasma
  produced around the spacecraft by dust and gas impacts was much more
  energetic than had been expected.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The AMPTE artificial comet experiments
Authors: Valenzuela, A.; Haerendel, G.; Föppl, H.; Melzner, F.;
   Neuss, H.; Rieger, E.; Stöcker, J.; Bauer, O.; Höfner, H.; Loidl, J.
1986Natur.320..700V    Altcode:
  In July last year and in December 1984, barium clouds were injected into
  the solar wind from the AMPTE satellite. The clouds resembled those
  of natural comets in that a head and tail were clearly visible. Tail
  rays formed with speeds of a few tens of kilometres per second, and
  other structures separated at even higher speeds. The comet head,
  instead of moving slowly downstream, performed a lateral excursion of
  several hundred kilometres. In the first of a series of six articles,
  the properties of the `artificial comet' are described.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dynamics of the AMPTE artificial comet
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Paschmann, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Carlson, C. W.
1986Natur.320..720H    Altcode:
  Sweeping the plasma before it, the interplanetary magnetic field
  quickly penetrated into an initially diamagnetic barium plasma
  cloud. The field was strongly compressed and extended in the flow
  direction. Ions accelerated by electric polarization fields formed
  a visible tail at the rear of the cloud; their recoil balancing the
  magnetic stresses. The dominant lateral motion of the head of the
  artificial comet is attributed to a recoil of ions extracted by the
  interplanetary electric field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dayside equatorial-plane convection and IMF sector structure
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Nakamura, R.; Haerendel, G.
1986JGR....91.4557B    Altcode:
  Using 1290 hours of GEOS-2 electron gun measurements between 0800 LT
  and 1900 LT we have analyzed the dependence of dayside magnetospheric
  convection in the equatorial plane at L=6.6 R<SUB>E</SUB> on
  the IMF sector structure, i.e. IMF B<SUB>y</SUB>≶0 and IMF
  B<SUB>x</SUB>≶0. For all IMF sector orientations the plasma flow
  at noon is directed predominantly sunward with a slight dawnward
  component. For positive IMF B<SUB>y</SUB> the plasma convection
  around 0900 LT has a duskward component which turns into a dawnward
  component for negative IMF B<SUB>y</SUB> values. The ratio
  between the electric field amplitudes at 1500 LT (dusk sector)
  and those at 0900 LT (dawn sector) increases from about 2 for
  IMF B<SUB>y</SUB> positive to 3-4 for negative IMF B<SUB>y</SUB>
  components. The convection pattern does neither show a dependence
  on the B<SUB>x</SUB> component of the IMF nor is it significantly
  different for gardenhose (B<SUB>x</SUB>.B<SUB>y</SUB>&lt;0) and
  nongardenhose (B<SUB>x</SUB>.B<SUB>y</SUB>&gt;0) orientations of the
  IMF. These results support the idea of component merging rather than
  the antiparallel merging hypothesis.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma flow and critical velocity ionization in cometary comae
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1986GeoRL..13..255H    Altcode:
  The plasma flow in the cometary coma is described by a simple relation
  which results from the balance of magnetic stresses and drag forces,
  the latter being mainly due to ion mass loading. Inertial and pressure
  effects are not explicitly considered, but lumped into a correcting
  factor of order unity. The relation is used to infer the ionization rate
  due to the critical velocity effect. The limits, r<SUB>crit</SUB> and
  r<SUB>lim</SUB>, between which the effect dominates over photoionization
  are evaluated. Critical velocity ionization stabilizes the plasma flow
  speed at η<SUP>-1/2</SUP> v<SUB>crit</SUB>, where η is the overall
  efficiency of energy transfer to the ionizing electrons. This speed is
  estimated to be close to 20 km/s. At the outer limit, r<SUB>lim</SUB>,
  there is a strong rise of plasma density as seen from outside. Inside
  r<SUB>crit</SUB>, recombination and ion-neutral friction come
  into play. The contact surface is found to be largely determined
  by ion-neutral collisions. A second neutral component of the order
  of 10² cm<SUP>-3</SUP> is predicted to originate from recombination
  inside r<SUB>lim</SUB>. It is characterized by an antisunward flow with
  ∼ 20 km/s. Numerical values for the radial profile of n<SUB>i</SUB>
  and of the critical boundaries (except the bow shock) are given. The
  high plasma density found by ICE at the closest approach to comet
  Giacobini-Zinner is interpreted as a result of the critical velocity
  effect.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma waves observed by the IRM and UKS spacecraft during
the AMPTE solar wind lithium releases: Overview
Authors: Häusler, B.; Woolliscroft, L. J.; Anderson, R. R.; Gurnett,
   D. A.; Holzworth, R. H.; Koons, H. C.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.;
   Treumann, R. A.; Christiansen, P. J.; Darbyshire, A. G.; Gough, M. P.;
   Jones, S. R.; Norris, A. J.; Lühr, H.; Klöcker, N.
1986JGR....91.1283H    Altcode:
  The two September 1984 solar wind lithium releases produced a rich
  variety of plasma waves which have been measured in situ by the plasma
  wave instrumentation on board the Active Magnetospheric Particle
  Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) IRM and UKS spacecraft. Reflection of the
  natural galactic and terrestrial electromagnetic radiation from the
  dense Li plasma caused a cutoff in the high-frequency electric field
  intensities from which the temporal and spatial variation of the plasma
  density can be determined. Inside the diamagnetic cavity the electron
  plasma frequency and also temporarily the Li plasma frequency have
  been excited. <P />The emission at the electron plasma frequency is
  near the thermal fluctuation level. In addition, weak low-frequency
  ion acoustic waves were observed. The boundary between the diamagnetic
  cavity and the external magnetic field was found to be surprisingly
  stable and contained extremely low levels of wave activity. In the
  transition region from the diamagnetic cavity to the solar wind, high
  wave activity at the medium and very low frequencies propagating mainly
  in the ion acoustic and electrostatic cyclotron harmonic modes was
  encountered. No wave magnetic fields were detected in this region. The
  upstream edge of the transition region was characterized by a steep
  decay in magnetic field strength and density and by a sudden increase
  in the quasi-static electric field. At this time the ELF/MF rms wave
  amplitude explosively increased to a value of 50 mV/m and remained
  at an enhanced level for more than 1 min. The spectrum of this wave
  activity is similar t the electrostatic noise observed in collisionless
  shocks. <P />Data from UKS indicate that during the releases, UKS was in
  the magnetic transition zone. The wave activity at UKS was distinctly
  different from that encountered by IRM. The intense emission at the
  electrostatic shocklike transition was weaker than that on IRM and for
  the second release appeared at a different time. This can be related
  to the different positions of the two spacecraft with respect to the
  interaction regions. Despite the high wave intensities the estimated
  wave energy densities are, however, too low by orders of magnitude
  of drive significant magnetic field diffusion during the in situ
  observation times. Some differences in the wave excitations for the
  two releases can be traced back to the different solar wind conditions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: AMPTE lithium tracer releases in the solar wind: Observations
    inside the magnetosphere
Authors: Krimigis, S. M.; Haerendel, G.; Gloeckler, G.; Mcentire,
   R. W.; Shelley, E. G.; Decker, R. B.; Paschmann, G.; Valenzuela, A.;
   Potemra, T. A.; Scarf, F. L.; Brinca, A. L.; Lühr, H.
1986JGR....91.1339K    Altcode:
  A release of approximately 3.3×10<SUP>2</SUP><SUP>5</SUP> lithium
  atoms was made on September 11 and again on September 20, 1984,
  by the Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE)
  Ion Release Module (IRM) spacecraft at a geocentric distance of
  ~18.8 R<SUB>e</SUB> in the subsolar direction, creating an ion cloud
  approximately 4 R<SUB>e</SUB> in diameter after one hour. Detailed
  modeling of ion propagation to the bow shock and transport through
  the magnetosheath shows that &gt;20% (September 11) and &gt;50%
  (September 20) of the ions mapped to a 36-R<SUB>e</SUB><SUP>2</SUP>
  area around the stagnation point on the magnetopause. The AMPTE Charge
  Composition Explorer (CCE) satellite, located inside the magnetosphere
  with an apogee of 8.78 R<SUB>e</SUB> and inclination of 4.8°, at a
  local time of about 1300 MLT, was instrumented to detect lithium ions
  over the energy range from a few eV to &gt;6 MeV. Detailed analysis of
  the data for the several hours following the lithium releases shows
  that no measurable lithium ion fluxes reached the location of the
  CCE; upper limits to the lithium flux at L&gt;8 are about 50 to 70
  (cm<SUP>2</SUP>-sec-sr)<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>1</SUP> in the range 25-300
  keV/e (Li/H&gt;2×10<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>5</SUP>), and about 0.1 to 1
  (cm<SUP>2</SUP>-sec-sr)<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>1</SUP> in the range 45-100
  keV/nucleon (Li/H~1×10<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>6</SUP>). The implications
  of these results are discussed in the context of current theoretical
  models of plasma entry into and transport within the magnetosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Analysis and interpretation of the shocklike electrostatic
    noise observed during the AMPTE solar wind lithium releases
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Ma, T. Z.; Anderson, R. R.; Bauer, O. H.;
   Haerendel, G.; Häusler, B.; Paschmann, G.; Treumann, R. A.; Koons,
   H. C.; Holzworth, R.; Lühr, H.
1986JGR....91.1301G    Altcode:
  During the Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) solar
  wind lithium release on September 11, 1984, and again on September 20,
  1984, an intense burst of electrostatic noise was observed near the
  upstream edge of the ion cloud. Comparisons with measurements by the
  IMP 6 and ISEE 1 spacecraft show that the spectrum and overall features
  of this noise are very similar to electrostatic noise observed at the
  earth's bow shock. A stability analysis using realistic parameters shows
  that the electrostatic noise can be accounted for by an ion beam-plasma
  instability caused by the solar wind proton beam streaming through the
  nearly stationary lithium cloud. The growth rate of this instability is
  largest when the ion density and solar wind proton density are similar,
  which explains why the noise only occurs near the outer edge of the ion
  cloud. The similarity to the noise in the earth's bow shock suggests
  that a shock may exist in the solar wind plasma flow upstream of the
  ion cloud. If the noise is associated with a shock, then it must be an
  electrostatic shock, since the ion cyclotron radii are too small for the
  existence of a MHD shock. Since the electrostatic instability occurs at
  phase velocities near the lithium thermal velocity, the electrostatic
  turbulence may play a role in heating the lithium ions and transferring
  momentum from the solar wind to the ion cloud. The noise may also play a
  role in the pitch angle scattering and diffusion of energetic electrons
  observed in the vicinity of the ion cloud. Because of the similarity
  to the solar wind interaction with the gaseous envelope of a comet,
  it is expected that similar types of wave-particle effects may occur
  upstream of comets.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma observations on AMPTE/IRM during the lithium releases
    in the solar wind
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Carlson, C. W.; Baumjohann, W.; Loidl, H.;
   Curtis, D. W.; Sckopke, N.; Haerendel, G.
1986JGR....91.1271P    Altcode:
  This paper investigates the lithium releases in the solar wind as
  they appear in the measurements of ions and electrons above 20 eV/q
  and 15 eV, respectively, made with the Max-Planck-Institut für
  extraterrestrische Physik/University of California, Berkeley, fast
  three-dimensional plasma instrument on AMPTE/IRM. The dominant effects
  are the pick up of the newly created Li ions by the solar wind electric
  field and the heating of electrons. When first observed, the beam of Li
  ions is substantially broadened, probably as a result of its interaction
  with the cross-streaming solar wind. Later on, when the Li density has
  decreased, the Li beam becomes narrower than can be resolved by the
  instrument. The observed increase of beam energies with time to more
  than ~1 keV can be directly attributed to the expansion of the lithium
  atoms with a maximum speed of ~3.8 km/s. Throughout the observations
  the Li ions move nearly along the electric field direction. This is
  a result of their large gyroradius. Shortly after the release, while
  the spacecraft is still within the magnetic cavity, hot (E&gt;70 eV)
  electrons are observed. Their density and temperature is further
  enhanced when entering the magnetic field compression region ahead of
  the cavity, consistent with adiabatic heating. There is no evidence
  in our data of a shock in the upstream region, nor of reflected solar
  wind ions.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Dayside Convection Viscous Interaction and Magnetic Merging
Authors: Baumjohann, Wolfgang; Haerendel, Gerhard
1986ASSL..126..415B    Altcode: 1986swmc.conf..415B
  Data from the GEO-2 electron gun experiment are used to analyze the
  dependence of the dayside convection electric field at L = 6.6 on
  solar wind and IMF conditions. The results indicate that dayside
  convection is predominantly driven by dayside merging rather than
  viscous interaction. The LT-dependence yields a dawn-dusk asymmetry with
  the disk sector electric fields being about twice as strong as those
  in the dawn sector. The regression coefficients are consistent with
  a merging efficiency of about 20 percent. The regression constants,
  of order 0.05 mV/m, apparently describe an electric field stemming
  from the ionospheric wind dynamo.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Active plasma experiments
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1986ape..book.....H    Altcode:
  The use of barium plasma clouds for spaceborne experiments and
  ground-based observation is described. Luminous plasma clouds are
  generated from releases of barium metal vapor in near-Earth space and
  subsequently ionized by solar UV radiation. The clouds interact with
  the magnetic and electric fields, constitute visible tracers of plasma
  transport, develop odd shapes, and fine structure and can be used for
  a variety of experiments simulating cosmic processes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electron plasma waves in the solar wind: AMPTE/IRM and UKS
    observations
Authors: Treumann, R. A.; Bauer, O. H.; Labelle, J.; Haerendel, G.;
   Christiansen, P. J.; Darbyshire, A. G.; Norris, A. J.; Woolliscroft,
   L. J. C.; Anderson, R. R.; Gurnett, D. A.; Holzworth, R. W.; Koons,
   H. C.; Roeder, J.
1986AdSpR...6a..93T    Altcode: 1986AdSpR...6R..93T
  Selected events of plasma wave and electromagnetic emissions in
  the earth's electron fore-shock region have been studied. Strong
  emissions are observed in the plasma-wave band when the site of
  the satellite is magnetically connected to the bow shock. These
  emissions are generally highly fluctuating. Under certain conditions
  one observes electromagnetic radiation at the second harmonic produced
  locally. Electromagnetic emission generated at a position far away
  from the site of the spacecraft is occasionally detected giving rise
  to remote sensing of the bow shock. These emissions are related to
  energetic electron fluxes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations of the artifically injected Porcupine xenon ion
    beam in the ionosphere
Authors: Häusler, B.; Treumann, R. A.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.;
   Bush, R.; Carlson, C. W.; Theile, B.; Kelley, M. C.; Dokukin, V. S.;
   Ruzhin, Yu. Ya.
1986JGR....91..287H    Altcode:
  A heavy (xenon) ion beam injected approximately perpendicular to
  the ambient magnetic field into the collisionless ionospheric plasma
  during the Porcupine campaign in March 1979 was observed over a range
  of distances from the ion source and of time by instruments on board
  the main payload and on a spatially separated probe. Plasma and field
  measurements from these instruments are presented for different phases
  of beam propagation. After an initial development of a diamagnetic
  cavity around the ion source, one finds a buildup of the beam current
  in the near zone of the beam for distances of less than R=15 m. At
  larger distances the beam represents a current carrying about 90% of the
  initial beam current of 4 A. The signature of the transverse magnetic
  field is consistent with a strong current flowing in the vicinity of the
  ion source at R&lt;3 m along the magnetic field into the source. This
  current is carried by the escaping beam electrons. In the near zone
  the electric field is saturated (&gt;0.1 V m<SUP>-</SUP><SUP>1</SUP>),
  indicating that part of the electron population follows the beam by
  EΛB drift motion. In the intermediate and far zones the electric field
  E<SUB>⊥</SUB> is only about 10% of the expected maximum polarization
  field. Neutralization of the beam has to be provided for different
  processes and constitutes a major problem. From current conservation
  it is concluded that field-aligned electron fluxes contribute to
  depolarization of the beam, thereby closing the beam current system. No
  significant deceleration or scattering of the beam ions is observed
  over distances up to half of the ion gyroradius, so there is no violent
  scattering of ions on self-generated ion plasma waves on the time scale
  of observation. This is in agreement with one-dimensional numerical
  simulations (Roth et al., 1983). The strong parallel electric fields
  observed in the beam are attributed either to density gradients or to
  anomalous resistivity. <P />In future missions it will be most important
  to resolve the electron distribution function on a time scale short
  enough to obtain information about the field-aligned electron fluxes
  contributing to the overall and local charge neutralization and current
  closure in the beam.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Künstliche Kometen.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1986PhyBl..42..134H    Altcode: 1986PhB....42..134H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Solar wind-plasma interaction - The AMPTE solar wind plasma
    releases
Authors: Bauer, O. H.; Baumjohann, W.; Foeppl, H.; Haerendel, G.;
   Haeusler, B.
1986csms.coll..189B    Altcode:
  A summary is given of the most important effects observed during the 3
  AMPTE solar wind ion releases. Some of these effects may be of relevance
  in comparable astrophysical situations when large amounts of matter are
  injected into an ambient magnetized plasma streaming with a velocity
  much larger than the sonic and Alfvenic Mach numbers. For detailed
  presentations the reader is referred to the original publications
  listed in the References.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma waves associated with the AMPTE artificial comet
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.; Häusler, B.; Haerendel,
   G.; Bauer, O. H.; Treumann, R. A.; Koons, H. C.; Holzworth, R. H.;
   Lühr, H.
1985GeoRL..12..851G    Altcode:
  Numerous plasma wave effects were detected by the AMPTE/IRM spacecraft
  during the artificial comet experiment on December 27, 1984. As the
  barium ion cloud produced by the explosion expanded over the spacecraft,
  emissions at the electron plasma frequency and ion plasma frequency
  provided a determination of the local electron density. The electron
  density in the diamagnetic cavity produced by the ion cloud reached
  a peak ≳5×10<SUP>5</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>, then decayed smoothly
  as the cloud expanded, varying approximately as t<SUP>-2</SUP>. As
  the cloud began to move due to interactions with the solar wind, a
  region of compressed plasma was encountered on the upstream side of
  the diamagnetic cavity. The peak electron density in the compression
  region was about 1.5×10<SUP>4</SUP> cm<SUP>-3</SUP>. Later, a very
  intense (140 mVolt/m) broadband burst of electrostatic noise was
  encountered on the sunward side of the compression region. This noise
  has characteristics very similar to noise observed in the earth's bow
  shock, and is believed to be a shock-like interaction produced by an
  ion beam-plasma instability between the nearly stationary barium ions
  and the streaming solar wind protons.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Waves and electric fields associated with the December 27,
    1984, artificial comet
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Ma, T. Z.; Anderson, R. R.; Haerendel, G.;
   Paschmann, G.
1985iowa.reptT....G    Altcode:
  A variety of plasma wave and electric field effects were observed during
  the AMPTE (Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers) solar wind
  barium release. Electron plasma oscillations at the local electron
  plasma frequency provided measurements of the electron density during
  the entire event. A static electric field of about 1 to 2 mVolt/m
  was detected in the diamagnetic cavity. This electric field is in
  the same direction as the solar wind electric field, suggesting that
  polarization charges in the ion cloud are not effective at shielding
  out an external electric field. As the spacecraft passed through the
  boundary of the diamagnetic cavity, a region of compressed plasma and
  magnetic field was detected upstream of the ion cloud. This region of
  compressed plasma is believed to be caused by solar wind plasma and
  magnetic field lines draped around the noise of the ion cloud. Inside
  the diamagnetic cavity electrostatic emissions were observed in a narrow
  band centered on the barium ion plasma frequency and in another band
  at lower frequencies. These waves are believed to be short wavelength
  ion acoustic waves. Bursts of electrostatic waves were also observed
  at the boundaries of the diamagnetic cavity, apparently caused by an
  electron drift current along the boundary.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A statistical study of wave poynting vectors measured during
    long-period magnetospheric pulsations at geostationary orbit
Authors: Junginger, H.; Haerendel, G.; Melzner, F.
1985JGR....90.8301J    Altcode:
  Electric and magnetic field data measured by the electron beam
  experiment and the magnetometer on board the geostationary satellite
  GEOS 2 were used to investigate wave Poynting vectors associated with
  long-period (150-600 s) magnetospheric pulsations. A total of 3580
  vectors were calculated for pulsations occurring during 186 days in
  the dayside magnetosphere. The ratio between the electric and magnetic
  field wave amplitudes was in general well above the local Alfvén speed
  and was found to increase with increasing wave frequency. The fraction
  of electric field pulsations for which magnetic wave components could
  also be identified was therefore larger for the low- and smaller for
  the high-frequency events in the range 1.67-6.67 mHz. Poynting fluxes
  were found to have values between 10<SUP>10</SUP> and 10<SUP>-5</SUP>
  W/m<SUP>2</SUP>. For most pulsations with periods between 400 and
  600 s the part of the vectors perpendicular to the ambient magnetic
  field had an inward component and was directed toward the nose of the
  magnetosphere in the prenoon and afternoon sectors. The behavior of
  the corresponding components of the pulsations with a 150- to 300-s
  period was not as clear. For all events observed in the winter season
  (between November 1, 1978, and February 28, 1979), 59% of the vectors
  had a field-aligned component directed into the northern hemisphere,
  whereas 41% of the vectors were directed southward. The frequency
  dependence of the E/B ratio, the magnitudes of the Poynting vectors,
  and their directional distributions are consistent for most events
  with the picture of standing shear Alfvén waves caused by solar wind
  driven surface waves on the outer boundaries of the magnetosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetospheric convection observed between 0600 and 2100 LT:
    Solar wind and IMF dependence
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.
1985JGR....90.6370B    Altcode:
  Using data from the GEOS 2 electron gun experiment, we have analyzed the
  dependence of the dayside convection electric field at L=6.6 (averaged
  into 3-hour LT bins) on solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field
  conditions. The convection electric field does not correlate at all
  with the solar wind momentum flux density (correlation coefficients
  of &lt;0.25). Hence viscous interaction plays only a minor role
  for equatorial magnetospheric convection at L=6.6. The correlation
  coefficients for convection electric field versus merging electric field
  are of the order of 0.5-0.6, thus indicating that dayside convection is
  predominantly driven by dayside merging. The regression coefficients,
  describing the (LT-dependent) transfer of the merging electric field
  to synchronous orbit, are of the order of 0.1-0.2. Their LT dependence
  follows approximately that described by a Volland-Stern model with γ=2,
  except that the regression analysis yields a dawn-dusk asymmetry with
  the dusk sector electric fields being about twice as strong as those in
  the dawn sector. For the above shielding factor (γ=2) the regression
  coefficients are consistent with a merging efficiency of about 20%. The
  regression constants (of the order of 0.05 mV/m) apparently describe an
  electric field stemming from the ionospheric wind dynamo. A comparison
  of the electric field described by the regression constants and two
  empirical models of quite day electric fields implies that these models
  still include a substantial dawn-to-dusk electric field, thus indicating
  the presence of solar wind dynamo action even during quite intervals.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma waves associated with the AMPTE artificial comet
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.; Hausler, B.; Haerendel,
   G.; Bauer, O. H.
1985iowa.reptS....G    Altcode:
  Numerous plasma wave effects were detected by the AMPTE/IRM
  spacecraft during the artificial comet experiment on December 27,
  1984. As the barium ion cloud produced by the injection expanded
  over the spacecraft, emissions at the electron plasma frequency and
  ion plasma frequency provided a determination of the local electron
  density. The electron density in the diamagnetic cavity produced by the
  ion cloud reached a peak &gt; or approximately 500,000/cc, then decayed
  smoothly as the cloud expanded, varying approximately as 1/t sq. As
  the cloud began to move due to interactions with by the solar wind,
  a region of compressed plasma was encountered on the upstream side of
  the diamagnetic cavity. The peak electron density in the compression
  region was about 15000/cc. Later, a very intense (140 mVolt/m) broadband
  burst of electrostatic noise was encountered on the sunward side of the
  compression region. This noise has characteristics very similar to noise
  observed in the Earth's bow shock, and is believed to be a shock-like
  interaction produced by an ion beam-plasma instability between the
  nearly stationary barium ions and the streaming solar wind protection.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Analysis and interpretation of the shock-like electrostatic
    noise observed during the AMPTE (Active Magnetospheric Particle
    Tracer Explorers) solar wind lithium releases
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Ma, T. Z.; Anderson, R. R.; Bauer, O. H.;
   Haerendel, G.
1985iowa.reptR....G    Altcode:
  During the AMPTE (Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers) solar
  wind lithium release on September 11, and again on September 20, 1984,
  an intense burst of electrostatic noise was observed near the upstream
  edge of the ion cloud. Comparisons with measurements by the IMP-6 and
  ISEE-1 spacecraft show that the spectrum and overall features of this
  noise are very similar to electrostatic noise observed at the Earth's
  bow shock. A stability analysis using realistic parameters shows that
  the electrostatic noise can be accounted for by an ion beam-plasma
  instability caused by the solar wind proton beam streaming through the
  nearly stationary lithium cloud. The growth rate of this instability is
  largest when the ion density and solar wind proton density are similar,
  which explains why the noise only occurs near the outer edge of the ion
  cloud. The similarity to the noise in the Earth's bow shock suggest
  that a shock may exist in the solar wind plasma flow upstream of the
  ion cloud. If the noise is associated with a shock, then it must be
  an electrostatic shock, since the ion cyclotron radii are too small
  for the existence of a MHD shock. Since the electrostatic instability
  occurs at phase velocities near the lithium thermal velocity, the
  electrostatic turbulence may play a role in heating the lithium ions
  and transferring momentum from the solar wind to the ion cloud.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetospheric convection observed between 0600 and 2100 LT:
    variations with Kp
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Haerendel, G.; Melzner, F.
1985JGR....90..393B    Altcode:
  Using data from the GEOS 2 electron gun experiment, we have constructed
  average patterns of the convective flow of plasma in the equatorial
  plane at L=6.6 between 0600 and 2100 LT and for Kp ranging between 0 and
  4. During very quiet conditions (Kp=0-1) the plasma flows predominantly
  westward with an outward component before noon and an inward component
  thereafter. The most likely dominant agent for this kind of convection
  is the atmospheric dynamo electric field. For moderate activity (Kp=3-4)
  the plasma flows as predicted by a Volland-Stern-type dawn-to-dusk
  cross-tail electric field model (if the atmospheric dynamo effect is
  subtracted) with a shaping factor close to 3 and the axis of symmetry
  rotated toward earlier local times. The shielding of the cross-tail
  electric field from the inner magnetosphere seems to be somewhat
  weaker on the dayside than on the eveningside. During times of Kp=2
  sunward convection and atmospheric dynamo effect seem to compete,
  i.e., sunward convection prevails, but our average pattern apparently
  is still substantially influenced by the atmospheric dynamo field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Overview of Li and Ba plasma injections in the solar wind.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1985JHATD...6..263H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma wave observations during the AMPTE lithium and barium
    releases.
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel,
   G.; Häusler, B.; Treumann, R. A.; Koons, H. C.; Holzworth, R. H.
1985JHATD...6..264G    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Numerical simulations of Ba- and Li-plasma injections in the
    solar wind.
Authors: Sachs, W.; Haerendel, G.
1985JHATD...6Q.264S    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma observations on AMPTE/IRM for the lithium and barium
    releases in the solar wind.
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Baumjohann, W.; Sckopke, N.; Haerendel, G.;
   Carlson, C. W.; Curtis, D. W.
1985JHATD...6..264P    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Doppler imaging of the AMPTE "Artificial comet" release.
Authors: Rees, D.; Haerendel, G.; Bryant, D.
1985JHATD...6..263R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An ion beam-plasma instability for explaining the electrostatic
    noiseassociated with the AMPTE solar wind ion releases.
Authors: Ma, T. Z.; Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.; Bauer, O. H.;
   Haerendel, G.; Häusler, B.; Paschmann, G.; Treumann, R. A.; Koons,
   H. C.; Holzworth, R. H.
1985JHATD...6..265M    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electron number density from the AMPTE/IRM plasma wave
    experiment during solar wind lithium and barium releases.
Authors: Anderson, R. R.; Gurnett, D. A.; Häusler, B.; Treumann,
   R. A.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.; Koons, H. C.; Holzworth, R. H.
1985JHATD...6..265A    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Upstream VLF waves seen following the AMPTE plasma releases.
Authors: Holzworth, R. H.; Onsager, T.; Koons, H. C.; Anderson, R. R.;
   Gurnett, D. A.; Haerendel, G.; Bauer, O. H.; Treumann, R. A.
1985JHATD...6..265H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: AMPTE-IRM (Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers -
    IonRelease Modul). Flugerfahrung nach einjähriger Mission.
Authors: Häusler, B.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.; Melzner, F.;
   Stöcker, J.
1985MPERp..45.....H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Observations of a pulsation event from the ground with balloons
    and with a geostationary satellite
Authors: Iversen, I. B.; Block, L. P.; Broenstad, K.; Grard, R.;
   Haerendel, G.; Junginger, H.; Korth, A.; Kremser, G.; Madsen, M. M.;
   Niskanen, J.
1984ESASP.217..633I    Altcode: 1984aims.rept..633I
  A magnetospheric pulsation event with a period of 6 to 8 min was
  observed with satellite and ground based instruments in the morning
  sector. The GEOS 2 satellite observed a magnetosonic wave with a
  Poynting vector directed towards the Earth. The variations of the
  electric field at the satellite are almost identical to those at
  the northern footprint of the geomagnetic field line through the
  satellite. Balloon measurements of auroral X-rays and particle and VLF
  measurements on the satellite suggest the existence of a wave-particle
  interaction process.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Simultaneous observations of a pulsation event from the ground,
    with balloons and with a geostationary satellite on August 12, 1978
Authors: Iversen, I. B.; Madsen, M.; Block, L. P.; Brøntad, K.;
   Ullaland, S.; Grard, R.; Haerendel, G.; Korth, A.; Kremser, G.;
   Niskanen, J.; Tanskanen, P.; Torkar, K. M.; Reidler, W.
1984JGR....89.6775I    Altcode:
  A pulsation event with a period of 6-8 min has been observed
  simultaneously by the geostationary satellite GEOS 2 and two balloon
  located in the area magnetically conjugate to the satellite. The
  balloons were equipped with electric field and X ray instruments. The
  pulsation event occurred in the magnetic local time sector 0600-1100
  determined by ground-based meaurements. The satellite instruments
  observed the signature of a magnetosonic wave having a radially inward
  directed Poynting vector. The electric field associated with the wave
  was closely correlated with the electric field detected by the balloon
  instrument near the footprint of the magneic field line through GEOS
  2. The ground-based observations show that the wave phase pattern was
  north-south straited and that it moved from east to west. The balloon
  x-ray measurements showed a strongly pulsating particle precipitation,
  in close correlation with the intensity of the energetic electron
  flux and the VLF electromagnetic radiation measured on the satellite,
  suggesting a wave-particle interaction process. The pulsations seem
  to originate beyond the geosynchronous orbit. The study demonstrates
  the usefulness of simultaneous measurements with a geostationary
  satellite and instruments in the ground area magnetically conjugate
  to the satellite.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A statistical study of dayside magnetospheric electric field
    fluctuations with periods between 150 and 600 s
Authors: Junginger, H.; Geiger, G.; Haerendel, G.; Melzner, F.; Amata,
   E.; Higel, B.
1984JGR....89.5495J    Altcode:
  One hundred eighty-six days of electric field data from the GEOS
  2 electron beam experiment have been used to study magnetospheric
  fluctuations at geostationary orbit with periods between 150 and 600
  s. While fluctuations are nearly always present in the electric field
  data from the dayside magnetosphere with typical amplitudes between
  0.2 and 0.5 mV/m, it is often hard to find well-defined concurrent
  pulsations in the GEOS 2 magnetic field data. Most events occur near
  noon and have the same characteristics: They are toroidal and nearly
  linearly polarized, the sense of polarization and the orientation angles
  of the polarization ellipses change sign near noon, the instantaneous
  frequency of the fluctuations is correlated with the instantaneous
  electron density, and in a given sector of the magnetosphere the sense
  of polarization depends on the frequency. There is strong evidence
  that these fluctuations are fundamental mode eigenoscillations of
  field lines in the vicinity of the spacecraft which are generated in
  the inhomogeneous plasma of the magnetosphere by some kind of solar
  wind-driven surface waves at the magnetopause or at the low-latitude
  boundary layer.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Resonant Alfvén waves excited by a sudden impulse
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Junginger, H.; Haerendel, G.; Bauer, O. H.
1984JGR....89.2765B    Altcode:
  On March 6, 19879, long-period hydromagnetic waves were excited in
  the forenoon magnetosphere by a sudden impulse (SI). The plasma drift
  velocity and magnetic field oscillations associated with these waves
  were observed by the electron gun experiment and the magnetometer,
  respectively, onboard the GEOS 2 satellite in the equatorial
  plane. The waves had both compressional and transverse components and
  had their probable source in a single, tailward traveling, large-scale
  magnetopause surface “wavelet” (i.e., a single rarefaction/compression
  pulse) caused by the passage of an interplanetary shock front. This
  surface wavelet apparently coupled into the inner magnetosphere via
  the field line resonance mechanism. The satellite observations and the
  Poynting vectors calculated from these consistent with a location of
  the resonance region earthward of GEOS 2 during the first 5 min after
  the SI while the satellite was located just inside the resonance region
  at later times. This shift in the relative location of the resonance
  region was probably caused by an increase of the Alfvén velocity
  as a result of a compression of the magnetosphere associated with
  the sudden impulse. The stronger-than-usual compressional magnetic
  field component most likely had its origin in the relatively larger
  wavelength of the SI-excited surface wavelet (compared with that of
  Kelvin-Helmholtz-excited surface waves).

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Local time dependence of the response of the equatorial
    electrojet toDP2 and SI disturbances.
Authors: Papamastorakis, I.; Haerendel, G.; Baumjohann, W.
1984JGZG...54..213P    Altcode:
  By using a method recently described by Papamastorakis and Haerendel
  (1983), the local time dependence of equatorial magnetic-field
  perturbations caused by the response of the equatorial electrojet to
  DP2 and SI disturbances could be derived from geomagnetic records from
  the Indian observatory Annamalainagar. For both types of disturbances,
  Delta-H and thus the equatorial current shows a pronounced LT asymmetry
  with the peak current density observed near 10 LT. This LT asymmetry
  of the equatorial current is due to a tilt of the two-vortex electric
  equipotential pattern (associated with a dawn-to-dusk polar-cap field)
  towards earlier local times at low latitudes. This tilt has its origin
  in the day-night asymmetry of the ionospheric conductivity distribution.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Report of ESA's topical team on space plasma physics.
Authors: Dobrowolny, M.; Eliasson, L.; Gendrin, R.; Haerendel, G.;
   Johnstone, A.; McKenna, S.; Morfill, G.; Vasyliunas, V.
1984ESASP1070...38D    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetospheric plasma drift during a sudden impulse
Authors: Baumjohann, W.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.; Junginger, H.;
   Amata, E.
1983JGR....88.9287B    Altcode:
  An interplanetary shock front (monitored by the ISEE 1/2 satellite
  pair) hit the earth's magnetosphere on October 17, 1978, around 0430
  UT. The changes in magnetospheric plasma drift and magnetic field
  associated with this sudden impulse (SI) were measured by GEOS 2 in the
  equatorial plane near the dawn meridian. After the SI the plasma drift
  first increased (in an inward direction), followed by an exponential
  decay. The magnetic field changes were purely compressional with an
  amplitude increase which also exponentially decayed. These features can
  be explained by adiabatic (quasi-static) compression of the magnetopause
  due to the increased solar wind pressure behind the shock front. In
  addition, both data sets exhibit also the excitation of a highly damped
  compressional hydromagnetic oscillation by the SI, thus hinting of a
  second, wavelike component in the compression of the magnetosphere.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Altitude and structure of an auroral arc acceleration region
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Papamastorakis, J.; Sckopke, N.; Haerendel,
   G.; Shelley, E. G.
1983JGR....88.7121P    Altcode:
  During a rocket flight in the dayside auroral oval on December 17, 1974,
  several examples of velocity dispersions of precipitating electrons
  were observed. It is shown that the commonly employed interpretation of
  such dispersions as resulting from a purely temporal modulation of the
  source is not unique: the same dispersion effects can also be caused by
  a moving source of finite width and constant intensity. This spatial
  model is further improved by adding the dispersion originating from
  a superimposed convection velocity. In general the source altitudes
  implied by the two models (temporal and spatial) differ. For one of
  the events analyzed the temporal model yielded a source altitude
  of ~3000 km. Because of special circumstances this did not differ
  significantly from the result obtained with the spatial model. The
  second case analyzed was inconsistent with the temporal model and
  required further modification of the spatial model to include an energy
  dependent source width, in line with expectations from an acceleration
  in a V shaped electric field pattern. Applying the latter model we
  derive a source altitude of ~3500 to ~5000 km.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma drift measurements with the electron beam experiment
    on GEOS-2 during long period pulsations on April 7, 1979
Authors: Junginger, H.; Bauer, O. H.; Haerendel, G.; Melzner, F.;
   Higel, B.; Amata, E.
1983GeoRL..10..667J    Altcode:
  During almost the whole day of April 7, 1979, wave activity with
  frequencies between 2 and 5 mHz and amplitudes between 5 and 20 km/sec
  has been observed with the electron beam experiment on GEOS-2. No
  corresponding activity showed up in the magnetic field data. The
  waves observed in the dayside magnetosphere are nearly toroidal
  and elliptically polarized. Their polarization is left-handed in
  the forenoon sector and right-handed in the afternoon sector of the
  magnetosphere. The orientation angles of the polarization ellipses on
  average change sign near local noon. A comparison between the electron
  number density as measured on the same spacecraft and the observed wave
  frequencies shows that these waves are consistent with fundamental
  mode eigenoscillations of the magnetic field. The model according to
  which solar wind driven surface waves at the outer boundaries of the
  magnetosphere are the energy sources for this kind of pulsations is
  supported by the tilt of the polarisation ellipses and by a switch in
  the sense of polarization near local noon. GEOS-2 should be located
  on the earthward side of the resonance in terms of this model.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE)
    program
Authors: Krimigis, S. M.; Haerendel, G.; McEntire, R. W.; Paschmann,
   G.; Bryant, D. A.
1983ESASP.195..317K    Altcode: 1983aes..rept..317K
  The Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) spacecraft
  carry out the release and monitoring of tracer ions (lithium and
  barium) in the solar wind and within the distant magnetosphere for
  studies of access of solar wind ions to the magnetosphere and the
  convective-diffusive transport and energization of magnetospheric
  particles. A single massive release of barium in the dawn magnetosheath
  creates an artificial comet in the flowing solar wind plasma within
  which diamagnetic effects, ionization, momentum exchange, ion transport
  and visible phenomena are studied. Comprehensive measurements of the
  composition and dynamics of the ambient Z or = 2 magnetospheric particle
  populations at the geomagnetic equator, including the energy interval
  (20 to 200 keV) of importance to the ring current are proposed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers program.
Authors: Krimigis, S. M.; Haerendel, G.; McEntire, R. W.; Paschmann,
   G.; Bryant, D. A.
1983JHATD...4....3K    Altcode:
  The Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers (AMPTE) mission
  will release and monitor tracer ions (lithium and barium) in the solar
  wind and within the distant magnetosphere in order to study access of
  solar wind ions to the magnetosphere and the processes that transport
  and accelerate magnetospheric particles. In addition, a single massive
  release of barium in the dawn magnetosheath will create a visible
  artificial comet in the flowing solar wind plasma within which studies
  of a number of different plasma effects will be made.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Towards an artificial comet.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1983ESAJ....7..135H    Altcode:
  The Active Magnetospheric Particle Tracer Explorers mission will
  perform a large barium release in the magnetosphere, on its morning
  flank. The barium plasma's interaction with the solar wind flow will
  in many ways resemble the processes occurring in the ionized coma of a
  comet. The downstream side may develop a turbulent wake and be slowly
  filled with rays emerging from the head of the artificial comet which
  are caused by a fast trapping of the solar wind magnetic field in the
  plasma cloud a few minutes after maximum expansion, due to anomalous
  transport effects. The heating and acceleration of the ions causes
  brightening because of the Doppler shifting of the barium resonance
  lines out of the bottom of the solar Fraunhofer lines. Although the
  visual phenomena may only last for several minutes, low light level
  TV systems will be able to track the phenomena for 30-60 min.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Über den Ursprung des Nordlichts.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1982S&W....21..508H    Altcode:
  The Northern Lights arise from the interaction of the solar wind with
  the earth's magnetosphere, atmosphere, and a region in between these
  two. The physical processes giving rise to the Lights, the cause of
  the Lights' structure and dynamics, the source of their energy, and the
  reasons for their occurrence in particular areas are addressed. The role
  of Alfven waves, field-parallel currents, ionization and dissociation
  reactions, and feedback is considered. The ionosphere's action as a
  screen and end resistance are discussed, showing how different types
  of electromagnetic radiation and heating and acceleration of inert
  gases result.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma and magnetic field characteristics of magnetic flux
    transfer events
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Haerendel, G.; Papamastorakis, I.; Sckopke,
   N.; Bame, S. J.; Gosling, J. T.; Russell, C. T.
1982JGR....87.2159P    Altcode:
  Plasma and magnetic field data from ISEE 1 and 2 are examined for
  5 passes of the magnetopause region at 20°-40° northern latitudes
  and ~0800 to 1215 hours local time. These intervals contained a total
  of 15 well-defined magnetic flux transfer events, which occurred in
  the magnetosheath as well as the magnetosphere. In either case, flux
  transfer events are characterized by a mixture of magentosheath and
  magnetospheric particles. This fact strongly supports the hypothesis
  that flux transfer events represent encounters of reconnected flux
  tubes. Inside all of the studied events, the magnetic field strength
  as well as the sum of plasma and magnetic pressures is strongly
  enhanced. This excess pressure appears to be balanced by the tension
  of the ambient magnetic field lines as they are draped around the
  reconnected flux tube. The different observed magnetic field signatures
  are consistent with expectations for encounters of the flux tubes at
  different relative locations. Only those events that appear to be
  crossings of the flux tube close to its magnetopause crossing show
  large (~100 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>) plasma flow speed ehnancements. These
  increased velocities are restricted to the trailing portion of the
  events and are directed at large angles with respect to the magnetic
  field. One hypothesis is that the increased flow speeds are caused by
  continued reconnection at the low-latitude boundaries of the flux tubes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Energetic ion composition in the subsolar magnetopause and
    boundary layer
Authors: Peterson, W. K.; Shelley, E. G.; Haerendel, G.; Paschmann, G.
1982JGR....87.2139P    Altcode:
  Energetic ion mass spectrometer data obtained on ISEE 1 have shown
  that the plasma in the subsolar magnetospheric boundary layer,
  magnetopause, and adjacent magnetosheath have an ionospheric
  component (He<SUP>+</SUP> and O<SUP>+</SUP>) in addition to the
  solar wind component (H<SUP>+</SUP> and He<SUP>++</SUP>). We have
  examined in detail nine intervals where the location of the subsolar
  magnetopause and boundary layer are well defined by the ISEE 1 fast
  plasma and magnetic field measurements. In five of the identified
  boundary layer intervals, keV He<SUP>+</SUP> ions were observed;
  energetic O<SUP>+</SUP> ions were seen, above background, in two of
  the boundary layers where He<SUP>+</SUP> was observed. The temporal
  resolution of the ion mass spectrometer was too coarse to rule out
  the possibility of He<SUP>+</SUP> or O<SUP>+</SUP> ions being present
  in the four remaining intervals. Ionospheric He<SUP>+</SUP> ions were
  also observed in the magnetosheath in two (and O<SUP>+</SUP> in one)
  of the nine intervals studied.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: An Artificial Comet Experiment
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Haeusler, B.; Foeppl, H.; Paschmann, G.;
   Rieger, E.; Valenzuela, A.
1982ncgb.conf..181H    Altcode: 1982gbhc.work..181H
  The joint U.S., West German and British Active Magnentospheric Particle
  Tracer Explorers experiment (AMPTE) employs detectors from three
  different satellites and will involve the injection of plasma into the
  solar wind. The experimental situation is analogous to that of a comet
  in that expanding neutral gases (barium and lithium) will interact with
  the solar wind while they are being ionized. Such cometary coma plasma
  interaction processes as the trapping of magnetic filed, the stretching
  of field lines, and the erosion and acceleration of cometary plasma,
  are expected to occur and to be visible through both remote imaging
  and in situ plasma diagnostics carried by the three AMPTE satellites.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Interaction of the Solar Wind with the Dayside Magnetosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Paschmann, G.
1982DEPS....4...49H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Alfvén's critical velocity effect tested in space.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1982ZNatA..37..728H    Altcode: 1982ZNaT...37..728H
  A sounding rocket experiment involving the injection of a barium gas
  jet in the upper ionosphere provided an opportunity of investigating
  quantitatively several aspects of the beam-plasma interaction that
  is the substance of Alfven's critical velocity effect. Whereas the
  experimental data are presented elsewhere, this paper contains some
  theoretical considerations of (1) the limiting neutral density for
  which the ionization process can operate, (2) the interaction of
  the freshly injected ions with the background plasma, and (3) the
  microprocess which leads to collisionless electron tail formation. The
  observed distribution of injected ions is consistent with the Townsend
  condition on the beam-plasma discharge. The mass loading on the ambient
  plasma, although locally high, has a weak effect on the dynamics of
  the involved flux-tube because of the limited extent of the beam. The
  most likely process by which energy is transferred from the freshly
  generated ions to the electrons is an ion beam instability leading to
  the excitation of lower hybrid waves

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence for magnetic field reconnection at the earth's
    magnetopause
Authors: Sonnerup, B. U. O.; Paschmann, G.; Papamastorakis, I.;
   Sckopke, N.; Haerendel, G.; Bame, S. J.; Asbridge, J. R.; Gosling,
   J. T.; Russell, C. T.
1981JGR....8610049S    Altcode:
  Eleven passes of the ISEE satellites through the frontside terrestrial
  magnetopause (local time 0900-1700 GSM latitude 2-43°N) have been
  identified, where the plasma velocity in the magnetopause and boundary
  layer was substantially larger than it was in the magnetosheath. This
  paper examines the nature of the plasma flow, magnetic field, and
  energetic particle fluxes in these regions, with a view to determining
  whether the velocity enhancements can be explained by magnetic-field
  reconnection. The principle question is whether the observed difference
  in tangential plasma velocity Δv between a point in the magnetopause or
  boundary layer and a reference point in the adjacent magnetosheath, had
  the direction and magnitude Δv<SUB>theory</SUB> produced by the Maxwell
  stresses in the magnetopause, assuming that the magnetosheath plasma
  moved across the boundary. Except for its sign, Δv<SUB>theory</SUB>
  is shown to be independent of the normal magnetic field component
  B<SUB>n</SUB> and flow component v<SUB>n</SUB>. For the 11 cases, the
  average ||Δv||/||Δv||<SUB>theory</SUB> was in the range 0.6-1.2, with
  a composite average of 0.8. The average angular error was &lt;25°,
  with a composite average of 10°. The plasma results would require
  10 of the crossings to have been located north of the reconnection
  line (B<SUB>n</SUB>&lt;0), and one (at 2.4° N latitude) south of it
  (B<SUB>n</SUB>&lt;0). The B<SUB>n</SUB> values obtained from minimum
  variance analysis of the magnetic data were mostly poorly determined,
  but in general their signs were consistent with the plasma results. The
  flow velocity across the magnetopause was also poorly determined but it
  had a negative (inward) composite average as expected. In several cases
  energetic magnetospheric particles with the proper flow anisotropy and
  in one case, reflected magnetosheath particles, were observed outside
  but adjacent to the magnetopause. All of these results support the
  reconnection hypothesis. The energetic particles were also used to
  identify the outer separatrix surface. In one case it was possible
  to conclude from its location relative to the magnetopause that the
  reconnection side was in the vicinity of the equatorial plane and
  not in the cusp. The electric field tangential to the magnetopause is
  inferred to be in the range 0.4-2.8 mV/m.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Measurement of plasma drifts in planetary magnetospheres
Authors: Grard, R.; Haerendel, G.; Melzner, F.
1981ESASP.164...97G    Altcode: 1981sse..conf...97G
  The GEOS satellites instrumentation is described. Plasma drift velocity
  and electric field are measured simultaneously and independently. The
  electric field sensor is an antenna made of two spherical probes
  separated by a distance of 40 m along a direction perpendicular
  to the spin axis. The field component measured by the aerial is
  derived from the difference between the electric potential of the two
  electrodes. The strength and orientation of the total field vector is
  computed, assuming that the electric and ambient magnetic fields are
  perpendicular. Plasma drift is measured, using four electron guns and
  one electron detector. The drift is evaluated by injecting an artificial
  beam with a 90 deg pitch angle and measuring its displacement after
  one or two gyrations.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Balloon observation of ionospheric magnesium ions
Authors: Valenzuela, A.; Bauer, O.; Haerendel, G.
1981JATP...43..785V    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Gestaltbildung durch Instabilität
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1981NW.....68..314H    Altcode:
  The terms growth and evolution can as well be applied to unstable
  physical systems. The ability of instabilities to create visible shape
  is being investigated. There are innumerable examples of that in the
  universe. One class occurring in cosmical plasmas results from the
  localized dissipation of energy stored in strongly sheared magnetic
  fields. It leads to the appearance of dynamic luminous structures,
  as for instance in solar flares and in the northern lights.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: A Cometary Plasma Experiment for the Mission to Comet Halley
Authors: Johnstone, A.; Bryant, D.; Edwards, T.; Hultquist, B.;
   Formisano, V.; Biermann, L.; Luest, R.; Schmidt, H. U.; Feldman, W.;
   Cerulli-Irelli, P.; Dobrowolny, M.; Egidi, A.; Terenzi, R.; Jockers,
   K.; Rosenbauer, H.; Studemann, W.; Wilken, B.; Wallis, M.; Haerendel,
   G.; Paschmann, G.; Winningham, J. D.; Reme, H.
1981giot.proc...17J    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Structure of the low-latitude boundary layer
Authors: Sckopke, N.; Paschmann, G.; Haerendel, G.; Sonnerup,
   B. U. Oe.; Bame, S. J.; Forbes, T. G.; Hones, E. W., Jr.; Russell,
   C. T.
1981JGR....86.2099S    Altcode:
  Observations at high temporal resolution of the frontside magnetopause
  and plasma boundary layer, made with the Los Alamos Scientific
  Laboratory/Max-Planck-Institut, Institut für Extraterrestrische
  Physik, fast plasma analyzer on board the Isee 1 and 2 spacecraft, have
  revealed a complex quasi-periodic structure of some of the observed
  boundary layers: cool tailward streaming boundary layer plasma is seen
  intermittently, with intervening periods of hot tenuous plasma which has
  properties similar to the magnetospheric population. While individual
  encounters with the boundary layer plasma last only a few minutes,
  the total observation time may extend over 1 hour or more. One such
  crossing, at 0800 hours local time and 40° northern GSM latitude, is
  examined in detail, including a quantitative comparison of the boundary
  layer entry and exit times of the two spacecraft. The data are found
  to be compatible with a boundary layer that is always attached to the
  magnetopause but where the layer thickness has a large-scale spatial
  modulation pattern which travels tailward past the spacecraft. Included
  are periods when the thickness is essentially zero and others when it is
  of the order of 1 R<SUB>E</SUB>. The duration of these periods is highly
  variable but is typically in the range of 2-5 min, corresponding to a
  distance along the magnetopause of the order of 3-8 R<SUB>E</SUB>. The
  observed boundary layer features include a steep density gradient at
  the magnetopause, with an approximately constant boundary layer plasma
  density amounting to about 25% of the magnetosheath density, and a
  second abrupt density decrease at the inner edge of the layer. It
  also appears that the purely magnetospheric plasma is ocassionally
  separated from the boundary layer by a halo region in which the
  plasma density is somewhat higher, and the temperature somewhat lower,
  than in the magnetosphere. A tentative model is proposed in which the
  variable boundary layer thickness is produced by the Kelvin-Helmholtz
  instability of the inner edge of the layer and in which eddy motion
  provides effective mixing within the layer.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Further determination of the characteristics of magnetospheric
    plasma vortices with Isee 1 and 2
Authors: Hones, E. W.; Birn, J.; Bame, S. J.; Asbridge, J. R.;
   Paschmann, G.; Sckopke, N.; Haerendel, G.
1981JGR....86..814H    Altcode:
  Further studies of the vortices in magnetospheric plasma flow with
  the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory/Max-Planck-Institut (LASL/MPI)
  fast plasma experiment on Isee 1 and 2 have revealed that the
  pattern of vortical flow has a wavelength of ~20-40 R<SUB>E</SUB>
  and moves tailward through the magnetosphere at speed of several
  hundred kilometers per second. The tendency toward vorticity pervades
  the total breadth of the plasma sheet tailward of the dawn-dusk
  meridian. The sense of rotation of the plasma flow (as viewed from
  above the ecliptic plane) is clockwise in the morningside of the
  plasma sheet and counterclockwise in the eveningside. The sense of
  rotation in the morning and evening boundary layers is reversed from
  that in the contiguous regions of the plasma sheet. The occurrence of
  vortical flow is independent of the level of geomagnetic activity but
  is associated with long-period geomagnetic pulsations. We believe that
  the source of the vortical motion is a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability
  of the plasma boundary layer's inner surface (i.e., the interface
  between the plasma sheet and the boundary layer) that has recently
  been proposed by Sonnerup [1980].

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Artifical plasma jet in the ionosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Sagdeev, R. Z.
1981AdSpR...1b..29H    Altcode: 1981AdSpR...1...29H
  The PORCUPINE sounding rocket project provided the opportunity to
  study the dynamics of an artificially injected plasma beam in the
  near-Earth space. The structure of the plasma beam, its propagation
  across the magnetic field as well as the resulting wave phenomena will
  be discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electric fields in the dayside auroral oval
Authors: Jorgensen, T. S.; Mikkelsen, I. S.; Lassen, K.; Haerendel,
   G.; Reiger, E.; Valenzuela, A.; Mozer, F. S.; Temerin, M.; Holback,
   B.; Bjoern, L.
1980JGR....85.2891J    Altcode:
  The results from four independent electric field experiments flown
  on three Black Brant 4 rockets in the forenoon dayside auroral oval
  in December 1974 and January 1975 are correlated with ground-based
  observations and rocket particle data. The electric field varied from
  zero to 150 mV/m. The predominant plasma convection was toward noon
  along the auroral oval with a smaller component directed toward the
  polar cap. In one case, however, a reversal occurred within the oval
  with plasma convection away from noon. Comparisons with magnetometer
  data indicate that in the dayside auroral oval. Hall currents
  sometimes are responsible for magnetic fluctuations observed on the
  ground. Comparisons with particle data show that the magnitude of the
  electric fields is inversely correlated with the electron energy flux.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The Aries heat sink
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Jerger, J. J.; Jerger, J. H.
1980ESASP.152..189H    Altcode: 1980urbp.symp..189H
  The failure analysis performed for ARIES sounding rocket motor
  failures, and the remedy developed for motor overheating are
  described. The principal failure hypothesis was that the motor-dome
  insulator fails under high gravity boost and the subsequent radiant
  heating of the titanium motor dome weakens the pressure vessel. The
  supporting heat transfer and ablation analyses are summarized. These
  detailed analyses and digital simulations quantitatively correlated the
  precise time-of-failure with known ablation and heat transfer rates and
  established firm design criteria for the aluminum heat sink. Analysis
  of the international magnetospheric study test rocket temperature data
  is described. This analysis confirmed the validity of the design and
  the effectiveness of the heat sink.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The barium ion jet experiments of the Porcupine project
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1980ESASP.152..507H    Altcode: 1980urbp.symp..507H
  The injection of a barium plasma from a sounding rocket by the shaped
  charge technique offers several possibilities that cannot be achieved
  by conventional releases. This is due to high initial velocities of the
  atoms of up to 14 km/sec. Most of the the applications are related to
  the great heights that the ions can reach, but some depend directly
  on the initial momentum. Typical applications are: tracing at high
  altitudes, modifications, and alternate Ionization processes. Project
  Porcupine contributions in this field are summarized.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Auroral particle acceleration - an example of a universal
    plasma process.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1980ESAJ....4..197H    Altcode:
  The occurrence of discrete and narrow auroral arcs is attributed
  to a sudden release of magnetic tensions set up in an intense
  magnetospheric-ionospheric current circuit. At altitudes of several
  thousand kilometers the condition of frozen-in magnetic fields can
  be broken temporarily in thin regions corresponding to the observed
  width of auroral arcs. This implies magnetic-field-aligned potential
  drops of several kilovolts supported by certain anomalous transport
  processes which can be maintained only in a quasi-stationary manner if
  the current density exceeds a certain critical limit. The region of
  field-aligned potential drops is structured by two pairs of standing
  waves, which are generalized Alfven waves of large amplitude across
  which the parallel electric field undergoes a finite jump.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma wave turbulence at the magnetopause: Observations from
    ISEE 1 and 2
Authors: Gurnett, D. A.; Anderson, R. R.; Tsurutani, B. T.; Smith,
   E. J.; Paschmann, G.; Haerendel, G.; Bame, S. J.; Russell, C. T.
1979JGR....84.7043G    Altcode:
  In this paper we investigate plasma wave electric and magnetic fields in
  the vicinity of the magnetopause by using recent measurements from the
  ISEE 1 and 2 spacecraft. Strong electric and magnetic field turbulence
  is often observed at the magnetopause. The electric field spectrum of
  this turbulence typically extends over an extremely large frequency
  range, from less than a few hertz to above 100 kHz, and the magnetic
  field turbulence typically extends from a few hertz to about 1 kHz. The
  maximum intensities usually occur in the magnetopause current layer
  and plasma boundary layer. Somewhat similar turbulence spectra are also
  sometimes observed in association with flux transfer events and possible
  'inclusions' of boundary layer plasma in the magnetosphere. In addition
  to the broad-band electric and magnetic field turbulence, narrow-band
  electrostatic emissions are occasionally observed near the electron
  plasma frequency in the vicinity of the magnetopause. Two possible
  plasma instabilities, the electrostatic ion-cyclotron instability
  and the lower-hybrid-drift instability, are considered the primary
  candidates for explaining the broad-band electric field turbulence. The
  narrow-band electrostatic emissions near the local electron plasma
  frequency are believed to be either plasma oscillations or electrostatic
  waves near the upper-hybrid-resonance frequency.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma acceleration at the earth's magnetopause - Evidence
    for reconnection
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Papamastorakis, I.; Sckopke, N.; Haerendel,
   G.; Sonnerup, B. U. Oe.; Bame, S. J.; Asbridge, J. R.; Gosling, J. T.;
   Russel, C. T.; Elphic, R. C.
1979Natur.282..243P    Altcode:
  Observations of high-speed plasma at the magnetopause in agreement
  with theoretical predictions of magnetic field reconnection are
  reported. Plasma ion and electron distributions measured by the
  quadrispherical analyzers on board the ISEE 1 and 2 spacecraft
  were obtained during the outbound traversal of the subsolar
  magnetopause. Plasma flow speeds of up to 450 km/sec were observed in
  the magnetopause layer, in contrast to speeds of 50 to 100 km/sec in the
  adjacent magnetosheath. The observations agree with the predictions
  of the reconnection model of the dayside magnetopause, in which
  the magnetopause is described as a rotational discontinuity, or a
  large-amplitude Alfven wave. It is noted that the lack of observations
  of plasma acceleration in most other cases of favorable magnetic field
  orientation could be a product of the rarity of magnetic recombination,
  or its small scale and nonstationarity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The motion of depleted plasma regions in the equatorial
    ionosphere
Authors: Anderson, D. N.; Haerendel, G.
1979JGR....84.4251A    Altcode:
  Depleted plasma regions in the equatorial ionosphere and their
  associated motions have been observed by a variety of ground-based,
  rocket-borne, and satellite instruments. Various theories based
  primarily on the Rayleigh-Taylor instability mechanism, have been
  proposed for the formation and motion of these bubbles. Numerical
  studies in the past have incorporated local electron density depletions,
  with Pedersen conductivities involving local ion-neutral collision
  frequencies. Realizing that bubbles are actually depleted magnetic
  flux tubes, we investigate the vertical E×B motion of these depleted
  regions, incorporating flux tube integrated quantities of electron
  content and Pedersen conductivity. A simple expression for the
  polarization electric E<SUB>1</SUB> inside the depleted flux tube is
  used. The resulting calculations show that the vertical bubble velocity
  as a function of time critically depends on the background ionospheric
  electric field and that this dependence extends to much greater heights
  than was previously thought. Bubble which are initiated at 350-km
  altitude (1900 LT) with a 5% depletion in electron content attain an
  upward velocity of 200 m/s at 1920 LT when the background electric
  field is 0.6 mV/m. Bubble altitude at this time is 447 km with an 88%
  depletion in electron content. In the absence of an ambient electric
  field, 1 hour is required for the vertical bubble velocity to reach
  200 m/s.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Max-Planck-Institut für Physik und Astrophysik, Institut für
    Astrophysik und Institut für extraterrestrische Physik. Jahresbericht
    für 1978.
Authors: Kippenhahn, R.; Haerendel, G.
1979MitAG..46..187K    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetospheric boundary layers. A Sydney Chapman
    Conference. Proceedings of an international conference held in
    Alpbach, Austria, 11 - 15 June 1979.
Authors: Battrick, B.; Mort, J.; Haerendel, G.; Ortner, J.
1979ESASP.148.....B    Altcode: 1979mbl..rept.....B
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Imaging the ionosphere in the light of magnesium ions from
    balloon altitudes.
Authors: Valenzuela, A.; Bauer, O.; Haerendel, G.; Haser, L.
1979scba.conf..203V    Altcode: 1979subr.proc..203V
  Magnesium ions are continually produced in the lower E-region by
  vaporization of meteorites and subsequent ionization. These ions can
  serve as tracers for ionospheric transport processes in much the same
  way as artificial barium clouds. Possible applications are: (1) in the
  E-layer: wind-shear, turbulence, conductivity discontinuities; (2) in
  the F-layer: ExB-drifts, in particular the equatorial fountain effect,
  spread-F irregularities, and, possibly, anomalous transport effects
  along magnetic field lines. MgII has two resonance lines at 279.5 and
  280.2 microns. These lines can be observed from a balloon at height of
  about 38 km. A payload with a wide-range camera has been developed and
  will be flight-tested for the first time in November 1978. The camera
  has a viewing angle of 90 deg and can resolve fine-structure of 400
  to 800 m wavelength at 100 km altitude. The images are obtained with
  an image converter - image intensifier - SEC TV-camera system. The
  sensitivity limit is close to 100 rayleighs. Brightnesses of several
  100 R up to a few kR are expected. Observations can be made when the
  shadow line at 280 microns is above 85 km altitude and below the level
  under investigation.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The barium ion jet experiment of Porcupine 2
Authors: Rieger, E.; Foeppl, H.; Haerendel, G.; Valenzuela, A.; Zhulin,
   I. A.; Gaidanskii, V. I.; Dokoulin, V. S.; Ruzhin, Iu. Ia.; Hallinan,
   T. J.
1979spre.conf..367R    Altcode: 1979spre.proc..367R
  A shaped charge produced barium cloud was observed up to about 5000
  km altitude from ground-based and air-borne stations. In contrast to
  earlier shaped charge injections, no distinct ion jet was obtained;
  rather a broad diffuse band was seen, in which three structures could
  be identified. The high velocity parts of the structures travelled
  upward in accordance with adiabatic motion. The transverse velocities
  were directed predominantly west-south-westward. Differences between
  the orientation of the Ba+-structures and model fields are attributed
  to field-aligned currents.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: ISEE Plasma Observations near the Subsolar Magnetopause
(Article published in the special issues: Advances in Magnetospheric
    Physics with GEOS- 1 and ISEE - 1 and 2.)
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Sckopke, N.; Haerendel, G.; Papamastorakis,
   J.; Bame, S. J.; Asbridge, J. R.; Gosling, J. T.; Hones, E. W., Jr.;
   Tech, E. R.
1978SSRv...22..717P    Altcode:
  The early ISEE orbits provided the opportunity to study the
  magnetopause and its environs only a few Earth radii above the subsolar
  point. Measurements of complete two-dimensional ion and electron
  distributions every 3 or 12 s, and of three-dimensional distributions
  every 12 or 48 s by the LASL/MPI instrumentation on both spacecraft
  allow a detailed study of the plasma properties with unprecedented
  temporal resolution. This paper presents observations obtained during
  four successive inbound orbits in November 1977, containing a total
  of 9 magnetopause crossings, which occurred under widely differing
  orientations of the external magnetic field. The main findings are:
  (1) The magnetosheath flow near the magnetopause is characterized by
  large fluctuations, which often appear to be temporal in nature. (2)
  Between ∼ 0.1 and ∼ 0.3R <SUB>E</SUB> outside the magnetopause,
  the plasma density and pressure often start to gradually decrease as
  the magnetopause is approached, in conjunction with an increase in
  magnetic field strength. These observations are in accordance with
  the formation of a depletion layer due to the compression of magnetic
  flux tubes. (3) In cases where the magnetopause can be well resolved,
  it exhibits fluctuations in density, and especially pressure and
  bulk velocity around average magnetosheath values. The pressure
  fluctuations are anticorrelated with simultaneous magnetic field
  pressure changes. (4) In ope case the magnetopause is characterized
  by substantially displaced electron and proton boundaries and a
  proton flow direction change from upwards along the magnetopause to a
  direction tranverse to the geomagnetic field. These features are in
  agreement with a model of the magnetopause described by Parker. (5)
  The character of the magnetopause sometimes varies strongly between
  ISEE-1 and -2 crossings which occur ∼ 1 min apart. At times this is
  clearly the result of highly non-uniform motions. There are also cases
  where there is very good agreement between the structures observed by
  the two satellites. (6) In three of the nine crossings no boundary
  layer was present adjacent to the magnetopause. More remarkably,
  two of the three occurred while the external magnetic field had a
  substantial southward component, in clear contradiction to expectations
  from current reconnection models. (7) The only thick (low-latitude)
  boundary layer (LLBL) observed was characterized by sharp changes at
  its inner and outer edges. This profile is difficult to reconcile with
  local plasma entry by either direct influx or diffusion. (8) During the
  crossings which showed no boundary layer adjacent to the magnetopause,
  magnetosheath-like plasma was encountered sometime later. Possible
  explanations include the sudden formation of a boundary layer at this
  location right at the time of the encounter, and a crossing of an
  ‘inclusion’ of magnetosheath plasma within the magnetosphere. (9)
  The flow in the LLBL is highly variable, observed directions include
  flow towards and away from the subsolar point, along the geomagnetic
  field and across it, tangential and normal to the magnetopause. Some
  of these features clearly are nonstationary. The scale size over which
  the flow directions change exceeds the separation distance (several
  hundred km) of the two spacecraft.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma composition experiment on ISEE-A.
Authors: Shelley, E. G.; Sharp, R. D.; Johnson, R. G.; Geiss, J.;
   Eberhardt, P.; Balsiger, H.; Haerendel, G.; Rosenbauer, H.
1978ITGE...16..266S    Altcode:
  The plasma composition experiment on ISEE-A consists of a pair of
  high-sensitivity high-resolution energetic ion mass spectrometers. They
  cover the entire mass range from 1 AMU to over 150 AMU in 64 channels
  at each of 32 energy channels covering the energy per charge range
  from 0 to approximately 17 keV/e. The objectives of the experiment are
  to study the ion composition of the ring current, the plasma sheet,
  the plasmasphere, the magnetosheath, and the solar wind in order to
  establish the origin of the plasmas in the various regimes of the
  magnetosphere and to identify mass and charge dependent acceleration,
  transport, and loss processes.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The frontside boundary layer of the magnetosphere and the
    problem of reconnection
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Paschmann, G.; Sckopke, N.; Rosenbauer, H.;
   Hedgecock, P. C.
1978JGR....83.3195H    Altcode:
  Further Heos 2 plasma and magnetic field data obtained in the frontside
  boundary layers of he magnetosphere are presented. They reveal
  hat the low-latitude extension of the entry layer is of a somewhat
  different nature. The most pronounced difference with respect to the
  entry layer in the cusp region is the substantial density jump at
  the magnetopause. Furthermore, the low-latitude boundary layer tends
  to be thinner and less turbulent, and the flow velocity inside the
  layer is always lower than that of the adjacent magnetosheath. This
  observation excludes large-scale reconnection at the front of the
  magnetosphere as he origin of the layer. It is suggested that diffusive
  entry of magnetosheath plasma and/or heating of detached plasma from the
  plasmasphere leads to the formation of the layer. It appears likely that
  reconnection is dominantly occurring as a transient process in the cusp
  region and accompanies the eddy convection inside the entry layer. As
  a consequence, magnetic flux is being eroded from the front of the
  magnetosphere. This is in agreement with the signature of short-term
  large-amplitude magnetic perturbations observed in the low-latitude
  boundary layer.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Microscopic plasma processes related to reconnection.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1978JATP...40..343H    Altcode:
  A brief review of both macroscopic (hydromagnetic) and microscopic
  theories of the reconnection or merging of magnetic field lines is
  given. The importance of phenomena similar to vortex formation and
  eddy convection in hydrodynamics is emphasized. Fluctuations observed
  by HEOS 2 are shown to result from the passage of convection cells. An
  eddy diffusion coefficient can be defined.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: The entry layer.
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Haerendel, G.; Sckopke, N.; Rosenbauer, H.
1978JATP...40..257P    Altcode:
  This paper summarizes briefly the plasma observations in the
  magnetospheric entry layer and its environment made by the Max-Planck
  Institute Instrument aboard the Heos 2 satellite. The main results are:
  (1) the clear distinction between the entry layer (and its low-latitude
  extension) and the plasma mantle, (2) the establishment of a further
  division between the entry layer proper in the high-latitude polar
  cusp regions, and a less dense layer at lower latitudes. If one also
  considers the observed lack of correlation between the proprties of the
  boundary layers and the orientation of the external magnetic field,
  and the failure to detect the characteristic plasma flow expected
  from magnetic merging in the sub-solar region, a reconsideration of
  the processes and the location of solar wind plasma entry into the
  magnetosphere appears necessary.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Vertical winds and turbulence over Thumba
Authors: Anandarao, B. G.; Raghavarao, R.; Desai, J. N.; Haerendel, G.
1978JATP...40..157A    Altcode:
  Features of the barium cloud released over Thumba, India at an altitude
  of 93 km are reported. The initial cloud form, two rings joined by a
  knot, was distorted by a north-south wind shear and a vertical wind
  gradient so that the rings became elongated loops. The upper loop was
  unaffected by turbulence during the 10 minutes of observation, while 280
  sec elapsed before the development of turbulence occurred in the lower
  loop. This finding could be evidence for the coexistence of turbulent
  and nonturbulent regions in the 93-95 km altitude range. Vertical
  velocities for the cloud as well as for other barium clouds released at
  lower altitudes indicate a profile which suggests the presence of an
  internal atmospheric gravity wave. The possibility is considered that
  gradients in the vertical wind could lower the turbopause level, found
  to be 95 + or - 2 km, about 10 km lower than the level observed earlier.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Microscopic plasma processes related to reconnection
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1976STIN...7733011H    Altcode:
  First, estimates for the thickness of the Chapman-Ferraro current layer,
  delta, and the diffusion coefficient, D, resulting from current-driven
  anomalous resistivity were derived. The basis of the estimate is a
  drift velocity of ions and electrons above the instability threshold
  and a maximum possible merging rate. 1.2 km &lt; delta &lt; 20 km and
  0.9 X 10 to the 12th power sq cm/sec &lt; D &lt; 1.5 X 10 to the 13th
  power sq cm/sec were found. Specific processes which may apply are
  ion acoustic and electron-cyclotron turbulence. Nonlinear saturation
  levels of these processes yield D approximately 10 to the 12th power sq
  cm/sec, in agreement with the first estimate, and predict narrow current
  sheets with widths only slightly above the electron inertial length
  c/omega<SUB>pe.</SUB> The role of MHD instabilities in this context
  is briefly touched. In the second part, evidence for eddy convection
  in the polar cusp region and its possible consequences for the mass
  transport into the magnetosphere and for merging are discussed. It is
  suggested that reconnection is not a laminar flow process occurring
  mainly at the nose of the magnetosphere as in the classical picture,
  but that it is rather a by-product of eddy convection in the polar
  cusps. The eddy diffusion coefficient derived from observations was
  estimated to be D<SUB>eddy</SUB> approximately 5 X 10 to the 14th
  power sq cm/sec. Several microscopic processes that could account
  for viscous dissipation of the eddies and reconnection are briefly
  discussed. The latter process would have spatial scales of several
  1000 km and would be highly fluctuating in time with a typical period
  of a few tens of seconds.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Evidence for a Rayleigh-Taylor type instability and upwelling
    of depleted density regions during equatorial spread F
Authors: Kelley, M. C.; Haerendel, G.; Kappler, H.; Valenzuela,
   A.; Balsley, B. B.; Carter, D. A.; Ecklund, W. L.; Carlson, C. W.;
   Haeusler, B.; Torbert, R.
1976GeoRL...3..448K    Altcode:
  Recent rocket probe, barium cloud and radar measurements conducted
  during equatorial spread F conditions are interpreted in terms of a
  Rayleigh-Taylor gravitational instability operating on the bottomside
  of the F peak. The persistent theoretical problems associated with
  strong radar echoes typically observed in patch-like structures at
  high altitudes are explained in terms of regions of depleted plasma
  density which bouyantly rise against the gravitational field.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Chairman's Report
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1976ESASP.115..202H    Altcode: 1976epsr.conf..202H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Co-Ordinated Measurements with EISCAT, Sounding Rockets and
    Balloons Aimed at Plasma Physical Studies
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1976ESASP.115..253H    Altcode: 1976epsr.conf..253H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma and Magnetic Field Characteristics of the Distant
Polar Cusp near Local Noon: The Entry Layer
Authors: Paschmann, G.; Haerendel, G.; Sckopke, N.; Rosenbauer, H.;
   Hedgecock, P. C.
1976JGR....81.2883P    Altcode:
  Heos 2 plasma and magnetic field measurements in the distant polar
  cusp region reveal the existence of a plasma layer on day side field
  lines just inside the magnetopause. Density and temperature in this
  layer are nearly the same as they are in the adjacent magnetosheath,
  but the flow lacks the order existing both in the magnetosheath and
  in the plasma mantle. Flow directions toward and away from the sun
  but, in general, parallel to the field lines have been found. The
  magnetopause (as defined by a sudden rotation of the magnetic field
  vector) mostly coincides with the transition to ordered magnetosheath
  flow. The inner boundary of the layer is located just within the outer
  boundary of the hot ring current plasma. In the region of overlap the
  hot electrons have the signature of trapped particles, though often
  at reduced intensity. The magnetic field is strongly fluctuating in
  magnitude, while its orientation is more stable, consistent with a
  connection to the earth, but is systematically distorted out of the
  meridian plane. The layer is thought to be a consequence of the entry
  of magnetosheath plasma, which does not appear to be unobstructed,
  as has been claimed in the concept of a magnetospheric cleft. The
  magnetopause has a cusplike indentation which is elongated in local
  time. The existence of field-aligned currents (total strength ≈
  10<SUP>6</SUP> A) and their location of flow in the inner part of the
  ‘entry layer’ (into the ionosphere before noon and out of it after
  noon) are inferred from the systematic bending of field lines. It is
  proposed that the dynamo of the related current system is provided by
  the transfer of perpendicular momentum resulting from the plasma entry
  into the layer. The essential features of the entry layer might be
  compatible with the model of plasma flow through the magnetopause of
  Levy et al. (1964) if a ‘dam’ effect caused by the cusp geometry
  were added.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Status and results of the altitude rocket program
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1975dglr.meetR....H    Altcode:
  Two significant advantages of a use of altitude rockets are related to
  comparatively low costs for an individual project and short development
  times. The altitude rocket program in West Germany for the period
  from 1973 to 1977 is discussed. A number of results of the research
  program are considered, taking into account the X-ray emission of the
  Crab Nebula, mass spectrometry studies of the D layer, and barium-ion
  experiments in the polar cusp. Attention is also given to the present
  status of development of the Aries rocket and a proposal for Aries
  rocket applications.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electric field measurements in a major magnetospheric substorm
Authors: Kelley, M. C.; Haerendel, G.; Kappler, H.; Mozer, F. S.;
   Fahleson, U. V.
1975JGR....80.3181K    Altcode:
  A Black Brant VB sounding rocket was launched at 03h 56m 05s UT on
  August 17, 1970, into the expansion phase of a major magnetospheric
  substorm during which the perturbation magnetic field was in excess of
  2000 γ at ground level. Measurements of the electric field component
  perpendicular to the earth's magnetic field made by double-probe
  detectors on board the rocket and by observation of the motion of two
  barium ion clouds released from the same rocket were in excellent
  agreement. The rocket remained within a region of intense particle
  precipitation where the field was 15°-45° south of geomagnetic
  west with a magnitude between 60 mV/m and 90 mV/m. The barium clouds
  drifted southeast into a region of weak aurora and smaller electric
  field. These measurements show that the electric field is not always
  smallest inside auroral arcs and that the poleward auroral expansion
  phase is not accompanied by poleward ionospheric plasma motion
  and suggest a divergence of the northward perpendicular ionospheric
  current and hence that a downward field-aligned current was present in
  the equatorward portion of the arc structure. During a portion of the
  flight the double-probe detectors also measured a parallel component of
  electric field between 10 and 24 mV/m which pointed downward toward the
  earth. The total electric field detected on board the rocket was deduced
  by two techniques: one technique which does not involve assumptions
  involving dc offsets of the detector but relies on the precessional
  motion of the rocket to separate E<SUB>⊥</SUB> and E<SUB>∥</SUB>
  and one high time resolution technique which involves an assumption that
  these offsets approach a constant value in the flight. The same basic
  conclusions were deduced from both techniques. When the possibility of
  current-driven anomalous resistivity due to ion acoustic waves is taken
  into account, the measurements are in agreement with a slow parallel
  motion of ambient plasma ions (&lt;10 m/s). However, when the theory is
  applied to a two-component plasma, the heavier, lower-density species
  should be accelerated to speeds much in excess of the observed values
  for the barium ions. Thus the low parallel barium ion velocity which was
  observed is not in agreement with an ion acoustic wave explanation for
  the observed parallel electric field. Although the evidence is strong
  that a parallel component of electric field was detected, one cannot
  rule out the possibility that this field-aligned potential difference
  was created by the motion of the vehicle through the medium.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Entry of Solar Wind Plasma into the Magnetosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Paschmann, G.
1975phpm.symp...23H    Altcode: 1975phpm.proc...23H
  Measurements conducted by the Heos satellite in the distant polar cusp
  region are considered, taking into account instrumentation, a plasma
  layer inside the dayside magnetopause, the magnetic field and plasma
  flow at the magnetopause, and the shape of the magnetopause. Attention
  is given to the formation of the entry layer and the currents and
  convection in the polar cusp region.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Eine Möglichkeit der Trennung von ionosphärischem und
    magnetosphärischem Anteil an den Magnetfeldstörungen in Südindien
Authors: Papamastorakis, J.; Haerendel, G.
1974MitAG..35R.225P    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Eine Plasmainstabilität von Scherströmungen als Ursache
    von Nordlichtstrahlen
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1974MitAG..35..217H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Die Spur der Magnetopause in der Magnetosphäre
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1974MitAG..35..165H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Project `PORCUPINE': a Step Towards Understanding the Aurora
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Klett, R.
1974esrs.conf..295H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Thermospheric observations combining chemical seeding and
    ground-based techniques - II. Ionospheric drifts and the Sq current
    system
Authors: Rees, D.; Haerendel, G.; Felgate, D. G.; Lloyd, K. H.; Low,
   C. H.
1973P&SS...21.1237R    Altcode:
  Two Skylark sounding rockets carrying chemical seeding payloads were
  launched from Woomera, South Australia in October 1969. In conjunction
  with these firings, the F-region drifts were determined with the
  Buckland Park aerial array and the results compared with the observed
  motion of the barium ion clouds. The local ionospheric Sq current
  system was calculated both from the observed ionospheric parameters
  and from ground-based magnetograms and the differences between the
  two results are discussed.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Numerical modeling of the drift and deformation of ionospheric
    plasma clouds and of their interaction with other layers of the
    ionosphere
Authors: Lloyd, K. H.; Haerendel, G.
1973JGR....78.7389L    Altcode:
  The equations of ion motion and of the electric potential, which
  describe the behavior of a plasma cloud in the ionosphere, are solved by
  numerical methods, the real ionosphere being approximated by a layered
  model. It is found that the dominant physical processes depend on the
  ionospheric region into which the cloud is released. In the E layer
  the main process is a continuous exchange of the ions constituting
  the perturbation, which results in the original cloud ions becoming
  imbedded in the ionosphere and drifting with it. The perturbation
  thereby moves like a wave through the ionosphere. In the F region
  the exchange process is very slow, and distortion of the cloud by
  self-generated electric polarization fields becomes the dominant
  effect. A comparison of the computed distortion with observations on
  barium plasma clouds suggests that electrostatic coupling between the
  E and F layers, over the scale size of the ion clouds, is usually not
  very efficient. The effects of an altitude dependent neutral gas wind
  and of ionospheric recombination processes have been examined. The
  altitude dependent neutral gas wind produces profound distortion in the
  cloud, but the ionospheric recombination processes appear to have no
  important quantitative effect. If small perturbations are introduced
  into the initial cloud distribution, they develop into fingers that
  closely resemble the observed striations in barium ion clouds. In
  the E region the perturbations are shed from the ion cloud into the
  ionospheric positive image cloud.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Results from barium cloud release in the ionosphere and
    magnetosphere.
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1973spre.conf..601H    Altcode: 1973spre....2..601H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Investigation of mid-latitude ionospheric currents by combined
    rocket techniques.
Authors: Rees, D.; Aggson, T. L.; Burrows, K.; Haerendel, G.; Rieger,
   E.; Lloyd, K. H.; Wilson, J. W. G.; Dorling, E. B.; Wrenn, G. L.
1973spre.conf..449R    Altcode: 1973spre....1..449R
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Coordinated observations of the magnetosphere: The development
    of a substorm
Authors: Mende, S. B.; Sharp, R. D.; Shelley, E. G.; Haerendel, G.;
   Hones, E. W.
1972JGR....77.4682M    Altcode:
  Coordinated observations of a substorm are reported by using data from
  all-sky camera (ASCA) stations near the northern conjugate of the ATS 5
  geostationary satellite, plasma and magnetic-field experiments on the
  ATS 5 satellite, Vela 5B at 18 R<SUB>E</SUB> in the magnetotail, the
  Heos 1 interplanetary probe, and ground-based magnetograms. The substorm
  event occurred after a very quiet day and was preceded by a development
  period during which the interplanetary field turned southward and the
  plasma energy density increased near the earth (6.6 R<SUB>E</SUB>)
  on the nightside. This period was also evidenced by a depression of
  the midlatitude H component of the geomagnetic field at the earth's
  surface. The auroral breakup was preceded by the appearance of quiet
  arcs, the leveling off of the plasma energy density increase at ATS, and
  the disappearance of the tail plasma at 18 R<SUB>E</SUB>. The onset of
  the expansive phase was evidenced by brightening and subsequent breakup
  of the auroral arcs, the development of a westward-traveling surge,
  an increase in the fluxes of energetic electrons, and the increase of
  the magnetic field at ATS 5. The ground-based magnetograms show the
  sudden intensification of the westward electrojet and the appearance
  of field-aligned currents.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electric fields and their effects in the ionosphere (Summary
    of observations).
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1972upat.conf...87H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Plasma Drifts in the Auroral Ionosphere Derived from Barium
    Releases
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1972ASSL...32..246H    Altcode: 1972emp..conf..246H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Ambipolar diffusion along magnetic field lines in the presence
    of an electric current
Authors: Scholer, M.; Haerendel, G.
1971P&SS...19..915S    Altcode:
  The one-dimensional ambipolar diffusion parallel to the magnetic field
  is treated for the case of a plasma cloud imbedded in a weakly ionized
  gas with a homogeneous magnetic field. We distinguish between cloud ions
  and background ions. A constant electric current is allowed to flow from
  infinity through the cloud. The resulting coupled diffusion equations
  for cloud and background ions are solved numerically. The initial
  phase is characterized by distortions of the density distributions
  of the ions owing to electric polarization fields which are the more
  pronounced the higher the contribution from the test ions is. The peak
  of the test ion distribution will finally move in the direction of the
  electric current. Situations in the F-region of the ionosphere where
  these effects become appreciable are liable to be affected by plasma
  turbulence and anomalous resistivity.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Physical Processes Involving Striation Formation in Barium
    Clouds
Authors: Völk, H.; Haerendel, G.
1971ASSL...24..394V    Altcode: 1971raat.conf..394V
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Striations in ionospheric ion clouds, 1
Authors: Völk, Heinrich J.; Haerendel, Gerhard
1971JGR....76.4541V    Altcode:
  We discuss the occurrence of striated irregularities in ionospheric ion
  clouds. Striations can either be impressed on the cloud from the ambient
  medium or generated by the cloud itself. If they are impressed on the
  cloud, the Striations are simply tracers of small-scale electric fields
  in their environment. To ascertain whether this is indeed the case,
  we investigate the stability of the cloud. It is pointed out that the
  cloud cannot be considered an isolated object and that its interaction
  with the ionosphere is essential if we consider striation formation
  by the cloud itself. In this part 1, the short-circuiting effect on
  cloud-generated polarization fields is considered in detail. The effect
  of the simultaneously generated image Striations is discussed for a
  homogeneous ionosphere. This effect is very strong, but for its final
  evaluation one needs a more realistic model of the ionosphere. This
  treatment will be the subject of part 2.

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: On the Balance Between Radial and Pitch Angle Diffusion
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1970ASSL...17..416H    Altcode: 1970pfm..conf..416H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electric Fields in the Ionosphere and Magnetosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Lüst, R.
1970ASSL...17..213H    Altcode: 1970pfm..conf..213H
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Striations in ionospheric ion clouds. Part I.
Authors: Völk, H. J.; Haerendel, G.
1970MPIM...50.....V    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: High altitude releases of barium vapour using a rubis rocket.
Authors: Rieger, E.; Neuss, H.; Lüst, R.; Meyer, B.; Haser, L.;
   Loidl, H.; Stöcker, J.; Haerendel, G.
1970AnG....26..845R    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Magnetospheric Electric Fields
Authors: Völk, H.; Haerendel, G.
1970iso..conf..280V    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Messung elektrischer Felder in der Ionosphäre mit künstlichen
    Plasmawolken
Authors: Haerendel, Gerhard
1969NW.....56..545H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Highly irregular artificial plasma clouds in the auroral zone.
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Lüst, R.; Rieger, E.; Völk, H.
1969MPIM...21.....H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Electric Fields in the Upper Atmosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Lüst, R.
1968epf..conf..271H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Diffusion Theory of Trapped Particles and the Observed Proton
    Distribution
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1968epf..conf..171H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

---------------------------------------------------------
Title: Artificial strontium and barium clouds in the upper atmosphere
Authors: Föppl, H.; Haerendel, G.; Haser, L.; Loidl, J.; Lütjens,
   P.; Lüst, R.; Melzner, F.; Meyer, B.; Neuss, H.; Rieger, E.
1967P&SS...15..357F    Altcode:
  Experiments with strontium and barium vapour releases in the upper
  atmosphere, carried out in the Sahara and in Sardinia in 1964,
  are discussed. (1) The yield of evaporated metal was tested for
  different chemical reactions. Sr proved to have efficiencies up to 40
  per cent. For Ba a mixture of CuO and Ba gave the best results with
  a yield of nearly 7 per cent. (2) No Sr ions were observed in the
  experiments. Barium, however, is strongly ionized. The ionization
  proceeds in two different steps: during the initial phase with a
  characteristic time of about 5 sec and by a slower photoionization
  process with a characteristic time of about 100 sec. (3) The diameter of
  the neutral clouds increased as one would expect for purely molecular
  diffusion. (4) The rate of increase in the central intensity of the
  clouds at sunrise was greater than the rate of decrease at sunset. (5)
  Atmospheric wind velocities of 50-130 msec<SUP>-1</SUP> were determined
  from the motion of the neutral clouds. The motion of the ion clouds
  perpendicular to the Earth's magnetic field in- dicated the presence
  of electric fields. (6) The initial expansion velocity for explosive
  mixtures was greater by about a factor of four than the mean thermal
  velocity of the atoms at a temperature of about 3000°K.

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Title: Motion of artificial ion clouds in the upper atmosphere
Authors: Haerendel, G.; Lüst, R.; Rieger, E.
1967P&SS...15....1H    Altcode:
  The paper sets out to solve the equations of motion for an ionized
  irregularity of finite length, and to apply it to the behaviour of a
  Ba <SUP>+</SUP> cloud. After a number of simplifying assumptions, an
  expression for the ionospheric electric field is derived in terms of
  (1) the magnetic field, (2) the velocities of the neutral and ionized
  clouds, (3) λ* (the ratio of the integrated Pedersen conductivities
  in the cloud and in the atmosphere), (4) <SUB>ki</SUB> (= gyrofrequency
  for Ba <SUP>+</SUP>/collision frequency). The magnitude and orientation
  of the electric field is evaluated from the observation of six barium
  and strontium clouds. λ* is assumed to be unity. The derived field
  strengths lie between 1 and 3. 10 <SUP>-3</SUP> V/in. In the evening
  the fields are pointing southward and in the early morning release
  northward.

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Title: Preliminary experiments for the study of the interplanetary
    medium by the release of metal vapour in the upper atmosphere
Authors: Föppl, H.; Haerendel, G.; Loidl, J.; Lüst, R.; Melzner,
   F.; Meyer, B.; Neuss, H.; Rieger, E.
1965P&SS...13...95F    Altcode:
  It has been proposed to create an artificial ion cloud in interplanetary
  space for studying the state of the interplanetary medium. New
  data concerning excitation and ionization by sunlight are given in
  section 2 for the alkali-earth metals Ca, Sr, Ba and for the rare
  earth Eu which could be used for such an ion cloud. In section
  3 the expansion of the artificial cloud in interplanetary space,
  the interaction of the ion cloud with the interplanetary medium and
  the minimum masses required are estimated. The results are stated
  in Table 3. In section 4 the methods used for the vaporization of
  the metals are discussed. Different chemical reactions which might
  have occurred, are summarized in Table 4. So far seven different
  experiments have been carried out with sounding rockets in the Sahara
  and in Sardinia. In these experiments metal vapour was released in
  the upper atmosphere. These experiments are listed in Table 5. In
  section 5 the results of the sounding rocket experiments of May 1963
  are discussed since the data for the later experiments are not yet
  reduced. The main results for the physical properties of the observed
  clouds and of the upper atmosphere at a height of about 125 km are:
  (1) The initial radius of the cloud was 0.25 km. (2) The velocity
  of the wind changed during the period of observation (15 min) from
  55 msec <SUP>-1</SUP> to 90 msec <SUP>-1</SUP>. (3) A wind shear
  of about 1 msec <SUP>-1</SUP>/km apparently exists there. (4) The
  diameter of the cloud increased faster than one would expect from
  purely molecular diffusion. (5) The neutral Sr-cloud changed from
  the optically thick to the optically thin case. (6) About 4 per cent
  of the Sr which was present only as impurity came out in the form of
  free atoms, as compared with 0.01 per cent of the Ba. (7) The released
  material is removed by reactions with the atmosphere in a time scale
  of the order of 10 <SUP>3</SUP> sec. In the experiments carried out in
  February 1964 the Al used in the chemical reactions had been replaced
  by Mg. This led to the production of Sr-clouds which were optically
  thick during the entire period of observation and about 30 per cent
  or more Sr came out in the form of free atoms.

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Title: Corrigendum
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1962JGR....67.1697H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS

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Title: A Possible Correction to the Spectrum of Geomagnetically
    Trapped Protons
Authors: Haerendel, G.
1962JGR....67.1173H    Altcode:
  No abstract at ADS