The electron energy distribution during HF pumping, a picture painted with all colors.
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/553Date
2005-07-28Type
Journal articlePeer reviewed
Tidsskriftartikkel
Author
Rietveld, Michael T.; Gustavsson, B.; Sergienko, T.; Grydeland, Tom; La Hoz, Cesar; Kosch, M.J.; Brändström, B.U.E.; Leyser, T.B.; Isham, B.; Gallop, P.; Aso, T.; Ejiri, M.; Steen, A.; Kaila, K.; Jussila, J.; Holma, H.Abstract
The shape of the electron energy distribution
has long been a central question in the field of highfrequency
radio-induced optical emission experiments. This
report presents estimates of the electron energy distribution
function, fe(E), from 0 to 60 eV, based on optical multiwavelength
(6300, 5577, 8446, 4278 A° ) data and 930-MHz
incoherent scatter radar measurements of ion temperature,
electron temperature and electron concentration. According
to our estimate, the electron energy distribution has a depression
at around 2 eV, probably caused by electron excitation of
vibrational states in N2, and a high energy tail that is clearly
supra-thermal. The temporal evolution of the emissions indicates
that the electron temperature still plays an important
role in providing electrons with energies close to 2 eV. At the
higher energies the electron energy distribution has a nonthermal
tail.
Publisher
European Geosciences UnionSeries
Annales Geophysicae 23(2005), pp 1747-1754Metadata
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