In a recently accepted paper in the Journal of Geophysical Research, Wilson and
Moore analyze LENA perigee data from the Summer of 2000 and find a strong
correlation between the Ap index, which measures the general level of geomagnetic
activity over the globe due to currents flowing in the Earth's ionosphere and
magnetosphere, and the low energy neutral atom flux soon after perigee [see
the figure to the right].
They conclude that many of the emitted ENA come from the
auroral zone and are produced by energized ionospheric ions rather than through
precipitation. Among the data they analyzed was one of the most spectacular events
seen in the LENA data: The Bastille Day Storm [the figure to the right]. At the
time of the LENA data, Polar UVI auroral images show an unusually intense
oval centered at about 60 degrees magnetic latitude (see inset). Wilson and
Moore conclude that for this event, the neutral atoms observed by LENA originate
primarily in the auroral oval.
Click here
for a PDF file of the Wilson and Moore paper.