Utilizing optical flow technique to understand plasma convection

Bea Gallardo-Lacour, Lindsay Goodwin,D. Megan Gillies,Larry Kepko,Emma Spanswick, Pablo Reyes,Eric Donovan

crossref(2023)

引用 0|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
<p>Plasma convection is a fundamental process of mass and energy transport within our solar system. In Earth&#8217;s magnetosphere, convection models often underestimate, or even fail to identify the contributions of dynamic ionospheric mesoscale (10s-100s km) structures that are responsible for significant energy transfer within the magnetosphere-ionosphere coupled system. The most used convection model relies on data from radars, which operates on spatial scales of approximately 50 km, with a temporal resolution of 2 minutes. In contrast, modern red-line all-sky cameras have a spatial resolution on the order of 1 km and temporal resolution of 3 s. These cameras respond to low energy precipitating electrons, which makes them sensitive tracers of magnetospheric convection, and sensitive to mesoscale structures that may be missed by radars. In recent years, the deployment of new cameras has expanded the coverage to include most of the auroral oval and polar cap above the North American continent. Despite their potential for monitoring and studying ionospheric convection, currently only rudimentary techniques have been applied to measure the motion of these optical structures. In this work, we show initial results of optical flow calculations to analyze the motion of optical structures observed with the new red-line all-sky cameras. Optical flow calculations represent the apparent motion of objects in consecutive frames. The result of this technique provides two-dimensional flow fields, which has enabled us to enhance our understanding of ionospheric electric fields. Finally, perform a validation analysis by comparing the optical flow calculations and incoherent scatter radar measurements.</p>
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要