IMAGE Views of the Aurora from Space
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The IMAGE spacecraft observed intense auroral displays in the Fall of 2003 as the material from the coronal mass ejection swept past the Earth. The pressure against the Earth's magnetosphere caused it to dump more electrons into the upper atmosphere, creating auroral displays, as we see here over the South Pole. This is a view of the IMAGE data reprojected onto a model of the Earth.
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Movie of IMAGE's view of the solar storm.
Duration: 3.0 seconds
Available formats:
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720x480 (29.97 fps)
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440 KB
320x240
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A snapshot of a low-intensity time in the storm. The bright linear structure in the upper left is an artifact created by the edge of the instrument field-of-view.
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A snapshot of a high-intensity time in the storm. The bright linear structure in the upper left is an artifact created by the edge of the instrument field-of-view.
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1 MB
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The bright point in the aurora moves along the auroral oval.
Available formats:
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TIFF
1 MB
320 x 240
JPEG
6 KB
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Animation Number: | 2964 |
Animator: | Tom Bridgman (SVS) (Lead) |
Completed: | 2004-07-08 |
Scientists: | Harald Frey (University of California, Berkeley) |
| Michael Collier (NASA/GSFC) |
Writer: | William Steigerwald (NASA/GSFC) |
Instrument: | IMAGE/VIS |
Data Collected: | 2004/10/29T05:44:53 - 2004/10/29T08:54:27 |
Series: | Halloween 2003 Solar Storms |
Keywords:
SVS
>> Aurora
DLESE
>> Space science
SVS
>> Space Weather
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Please give credit for this item to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio |
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