The altitude of green OI 557.7 nm and blue N2+ 427.8 nm aurora
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30657Date
2023-01-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
During low-energy electron precipitation ( 4 keV), when the two emissions peak above about 110 km, it is more likely for the green emission to peak below the blue emission than vice versa, with the difference between the two heights increasing with their average. Modelling has shown that under these conditions the dominant source of O(1S), the upper state of the green line, is energy transfer from excited N2 (), with a rate that depends on the product of the N2 and O number densities. Since both number densities decrease with higher altitude, the production of O(1S) by energy transfer from N2 peaks at lower altitude than the N2 ionisation rate, which depends on the N2 number density only. Consequently, the green aurora peaks below the blue aurora.
When the two emissions peak below about 110 km, they typically peak at very similar altitude. The dominant source of O(1S) at low altitudes must not be energy transfer from N2, since the rate of that process peaks above the N2 ionisation rate and blue emission due to quenching of the long-lived excited N2 at low altitudes. Dissociative recombination of seems most likely to be a major source at these low altitudes, but our model is unable to reproduce observations fully, suggesting there may be additional sources of O(1S) unaccounted for.