@phdthesis{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00005053, author = {Shiokawa, Kazuo and 塩川, 和夫}, month = {Jul}, note = {Magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling processes associated with auroras have been studied on both the local and the global scale and on various magnetic activities and substorm phases. The magnetospheric electron density nM and thermal energy EM above auroral arcs have been estimated by fitting the accelerated Maxwellian distribution function to the electron energy spectra observed by two Antarctic rockets and the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) satellites. The fitting based on the adiabatic theory of auroral particle motions between the magnetosphere and the ionosphere. The theory also shows that the field-aligned current j∥is linearly proportional to the fieldaligned potential difference V∥. The proportional constant corresponds to the adiabatic conductivity K along a magnetic field line. The main finding of this study is that the estimated magnetospheric electron density nM and the adiabatic conductivity K decrease with increasing V∥(obtained from the statistical study using the DMSP particle data). This fact suggests that field-aligned potential differences are formed to maintain field-aligned currents in the magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling process. Several features of electron heating during field-aligned acceleration have been studied in detail using the rocket data and on a global scale using the DMSP data. The different structures of magnetospheric electron densities above quiet and active auroral arcs are found from the rocket observations. The DMSP observations suggest that the estimated electron density and thermal energy in the magnetosphere are very useful parameters for identifying the magnetospheric source region of precipitating particles. Another interesting result of the present study is that we have shown the global changes in the precipitating particle features associated with substorm phases. The Central Plasma Sheet (CPS) type electron precipitation region expands toward a higher latitude around midnight and toward a lower latitude around the postmidnight sector after the substorm occurs. Latitudinal dispersion of electron and ion energy is found near the lowest latitude of the particle precipitation region. The dispersion features can be explained by particle motions injected from the magnetotail associated with the substorm. Partial overlap events between the traditional Boundary Plasma Sheet (BPS) and CPS are found for all the nightside local times of 1800-0900 MLT in the recovery phase and only around the morning and evening sectors before the substorm onset. These overlap events suggest mixing of the source plasma of BPS and CPS at these times. A drastic increase in the field-aligned potential difference is observed in the eveningside BPS region after the substorm onset, while the potential difference for the overlap events are found to be slightly larger on the morning side. It is suggested that the mechanism by which the field-aligned potential difference is formed to maintain the field-aligned current can produce these different dawn-dusk asymmetries of potential difference. The magnetospheric electron density for the eveningside BPS region is found not to change greatly before and after and the substorm onset, suggesting that supply and loss of magnetospheric electrons in the evening sector are balanced during the substorm., 名古屋大学博士学位論文 学位の種類:博士(理学) (論文) 学位授与年月日:平成6年7月11日}, school = {名古屋大学, Nagoya University}, title = {A Study of Auroral Particles: Their Global Characteristics and Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling Processes}, year = {1994} }