The ultraviolet spectrum of a dayside aurora: 530–1500 Å

1989 
Rocket-borne spectrometers have observed the high-latitude dayside aurora above Cape Parry, N.W.T. Ultraviolet spectra of optical emissions produced by ambient precipitating particles have been obtained in the wavelength region between 530 and 1500 A, over a range of spectrometer line-of-sight orientations, from 100 km to the rocket apogee of 452 km. The spectrum below 1500 A is dominated by transitions from neutral and singly ionized atomic oxygen. NI, NII, and molecular nitrogen emissions, which are prominent in day airglow and nighttime auroral spectra measured by the same instrumentation, are very weak, indicating energy from the dayside auroral particles is transferred to the atmosphere above most of the N2. Relative line strengths of OI and OII transitions in the high-latitude dayside aurora differ in comparison with either airglow or nighttime auroral observations. The differences arise from differing excitation mechanisms and radiative-transfer characteristics and indicate the far-UV region of the...
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