15th Annual Meeting of the Northwest Section of the APS
Volume 59, Number 6
Thursday–Saturday, May 1–3, 2014;
Seattle, Washington
Session C4: Applied and Multidisciplinary Physics
1:30 PM–4:33 PM,
Friday, May 2, 2014
Alder Commons
Room: 106
Chair: John Orrell, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2014.NWS.C4.8
Abstract: C4.00008 : The Quantification of Auroral Patches: Musings of a Neuroscientist
3:27 PM–3:57 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Simon Spanswick
(Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary)
The aurora is a consequence of processes occurring in the near-Earth space
environment. Details about auroral structure and behavior can provide clues
about plasma processes occurring in regions of space that are rarely sampled
by spacecraft. By using the aurora to indirectly measure aspects of plasma
dynamics we can gain a system-level snapshot that would not otherwise be
observable. One common type of aurora is patchy aurora, which refers to
irregularly shaped ``blobs'' that form a characteristic patch pattern in
auroral image data.~Patches are most often observed at mid- to low-auroral
latitudes, equatorward of the peak in the proton aurora. One of the
remarkable features of patchy aurora is the apparent coherent and relatively
consistent shape of the patches, which can be present for minutes at a time
in the field of view of a single all-sky camera. The structure of an
individual patch is often maintained as it drifts in longitude through a
camera field of view.~This behavior is thought to be a consequence of both
plasma dynamics and structure in the region Earthward of the central plasma
sheet. Here we describe a cross-disciplinary approach to quantifying auroral
patches.~Statistics are derived from a collaboration between the fields of
neuroscience and space physics.~Specifically, we employ a modified
stereological approach to quantify length and orientation of patchy aurora.
Stereological quantification has been successfully employed within the
neurosciences to estimate the length, volume, or number of objects within a
specific region of interest. One of the central tenets of stereology is the
random, systematic sampling method, which has been demonstrated as both
highly accurate and efficient. We adopt a modified stereological procedure,
using random, systematic sampling to produce an unbiased estimate of patch
length and orientation within the aurora.~ The output of this procedure can
also be adapted to follow individual~patches and produce velocity fields in
a given image.~These techniques allow us to quantify the evolution of both
individual patches, and the patchy aurora region as a whole. We also discuss
the future possibility of using this technique to produce a semi-automated
convection map for specific events. We assert that these maps will provide a
time-evolving picture of the 2D convection velocity in the ionosphere with
excellent spatial and temporal resolution.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2014.NWS.C4.8