The book is devoted to the achievements of two complementary multispacecraft missions – INTERBALL and CLUSTER II. The advantages of these powerful instruments for magnetospheric investigations are clearly shown together with problems that were or should be overcome in the mission management and data
Multiscale Processes in the Earth’s Magnetosphere: From Interball to Cluster
✍ Scribed by John D. Richardson, Ying Liu (auth.), Jean-André Sauvaud, Zdeněk Němeček (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 335
- Series
- NATO Science Series II: Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry 178
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The past forty years of space research have seen a substantial improvement in our understanding of the Earth’s magnetosphere and its coupling with the solar wind and interplanetary magnetic ?eld (IMF). The magnetospheric str- ture has been mapped and major processes determining this structure have been de?ned. However, the picture obtained is too often static. We know how the magnetosphere forms via the interaction of the solar wind and IMF with the Earth’s magnetic ?eld. We can describe the steady state for various upstream conditions but do not really understand the dynamic processes leading from one state to another. The main dif?culty is that the magnetosphere is a comp- cated system with many time constants ranging from fractions of a second to days and the system rarely attains a steady state. Two decades ago, it became clear that further progress would require multi-point measurements. Since then, two multi-spacecraft missions have been launched — INTERBALL in 1995/96 and CLUSTER II in 2000. The objectives of these missions d- fered but were complementary: While CLUSTER is adapted to meso-scale processes, INTERBALL observed larger spatial and temporal scales. However, the number of papers taking advantage of both missions simul- neously is rather small.
✦ Table of Contents
Propagation and Evolution of ICMES in the Solar Wind....Pages 1-14
The Solar Wind Interaction with Planetary Magnetospheres....Pages 15-35
An Overview of New Concepts Deduced from Interball Solar Wind Investigations....Pages 37-56
Interplanetary Discontinuities and Shocks in the Earth’s Magnetosheath....Pages 57-71
Magnetosheath Investigations: Interball Contribution to the Topic....Pages 73-94
Pressure Pulses and Cavity Mode Resonances....Pages 95-110
Two-Point Interball Observations of the LLBL....Pages 111-130
Cluster: New Measurements of Plasma Structures in 3D....Pages 131-147
CUSP Properties for B y Domainant IMF....Pages 149-174
CEP as a Source of Upstream Energetic Ions....Pages 175-194
Magnetic Cloud and Magnetosphere—Ionosphere Response to the 6 November 1997 CME....Pages 195-204
Multipoint Observations of Transient Event Motion Through the Ionosphere and Magnetosphere....Pages 205-215
A Model for the MHD Turbulence in the Earth’s Plasma Sheet: Building Computer Simulations....Pages 217-253
Cold Ionospheric Ions in the External Dayside Magnetosphere....Pages 255-273
Role of Electrostatic Effects in Thin Current Sheets....Pages 275-288
Bursty Bulk Flows and Their Ionospheric Footprints....Pages 289-306
Multi-Point Cluster Observations of VLF Risers, Fallers and Hooks at and Near the Plasmapause....Pages 307-328
✦ Subjects
Extraterrestrial Physics, Space Sciences; Atoms and Molecules in Strong Fields, Plasma Physics
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