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Far Ultraviolet Imaging from the Image Spacecraft

TLDR
In this article, the IMAGE satellite instrument complement includes three Far Ultraviolet (FUV) instruments, including Wideband Imaging Camera (WIC), Spectrographic Imager (SI), and GEO instrument.
Abstract
Direct imaging of the magnetosphere by the IMAGE spacecraft will be supplemented by observation of the global aurora. The IMAGE satellite instrument complement includes three Far Ultraviolet (FUV) instruments. The Wideband Imaging Camera (WIC) will provide broad band ultraviolet images of the aurora for maximum spatial and temporal resolution by imaging the LBH N2 bands of the aurora. The Spectrographic Imager (SI), a novel form of monochromatic imager, will image the aurora, filtered by wavelength. The proton-induced component of the aurora will be imaged separately by measuring the Doppler-shifted Lyman-a. Finally, the GEO instrument will observe the distribution of the geocoronal emission to obtain the neutral background density source for charge exchange in the magnetosphere. The FUV instrument complement looks radially outward from the rotating IMAGE satellite and, therefore, it spends only a short time observing the aurora and the Earth during each spin. To maximize photon collection efficiency and use efficiently the short time available for exposures the FUV auroral imagers WIC and SI both have wide fields of view and take data continuously as the auroral region proceeds through the field of view. To minimize data volume, the set of multiple images are electronically co-added by suitably shifting each image to compensate for the spacecraft rotation. In order to minimize resolution loss, the images have to be distort ion-corrected in real time. The distortion correction is accomplished using high speed look up tables that are pre-generated by least square fitting to polynomial functions by the on-orbit processor. The instruments were calibrated individually while on stationary platforms, mostly in vacuum chambers. Extensive ground-based testing was performed with visible and near UV simulators mounted on a rotating platform to emulate their performance on a rotating spacecraft.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The THEMIS Array of Ground-based Observatories for the Study of Auroral Substorms

TL;DR: The NASA Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS) project as mentioned in this paper is intended to investigate magnetospheric substorm phenomena by using five in-situ satellites and ground-based all-sky imagers and magnetometers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Substorm onset observations by IMAGE-FUV

TL;DR: The first 2.5 years of operation, the FUV instrument on the IMAGE spacecraft observed more than 2400 substorm onsets in the Northern Hemisphere as mentioned in this paper, which confirmed earlier results of statistical studies in terms of a median substorm onset location at 2300 hours and 66.4 degrees magnetic latitude.
Journal ArticleDOI

Longitudinal structure of the equatorial anomaly in the nighttime ionosphere observed by IMAGE/FUV

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the global characteristics of the nighttime equatorial anomaly (EA) by constructing a constant local time map (LT map), in which pixels within an assigned local time range are extracted from the IMAGE/FUV nightglow images obtained over an observation period of 3 days or more and are put together to compose a global distribution map of emission intensities at that local time.
Book ChapterDOI

Image Mission Overview

TL;DR: The Imager for Magnetopause-to-Aurora Global Exploration (IMAGE) mission is the first mission in NASA's MIDEX (Mid-size Explorer) program as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic flux transport in the Dungey cycle: A survey of dayside and nightside reconnection rates

TL;DR: In this paper, changes in the open flux content of the ionospheric polar cap, estimated from auroral, radar, and low-Earth orbit particle measurements, are used to determine dayside and nightside reconnection rates during 73 hours of observation spread over nine intervals.
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