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Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Other

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Standard

Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions. / Wild, J. A.; Hapgood, M. A.
2006. 337-342 Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Substorms (ICS8).

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Other

Harvard

Wild, JA & Hapgood, MA 2006, 'Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions', Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Substorms (ICS8), 1/01/00 pp. 337-342.

APA

Wild, J. A., & Hapgood, M. A. (2006). Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions. 337-342. Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Substorms (ICS8).

Vancouver

Wild JA, Hapgood MA. Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions. 2006. Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Substorms (ICS8).

Author

Wild, J. A. ; Hapgood, M. A. / Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions. Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Substorms (ICS8).6 p.

Bibtex

@conference{323dddb51cae4d229466e23e00257dcf,
title = "Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions",
abstract = "THEMIS represents the most ambitious coordinated multi-spacecraft and ground-based programme ever attempted. It is expected that this mission will dramatically increase our understanding of the substorm process. In the years leading up to the launch of the five THEMIS probes, the four-spacecraft Cluster mission has defined the state of the art in the field of multi-spacecraft/ground-based investigations of the geospace environment. Hitherto unprecedented coordination of space- and ground-based experiments have yielded multi-point (in situ and remotely sensed) measurements of magnetospheric structure and dynamics. The overlap of the Cluster and THEMIS missions presents an excellent opportunity to move the multi-point measurement technique to the next stage. Since the apogees of the Cluster and THEMIS satellites orbits are separated by nearly 12 hour of local time, the synergy of these two missions and ground- based experiments will allow the detailed observation of solar wind-magnetosphere-ionosphere on both the day and nightside of the Earth. Several experimental scenarios will be presented.",
keywords = "Cluster, THEMIS DCS-publications-id, inproc-502, DCS-publications-credits, iono-fa, DCS-publications-personnel-id, 104",
author = "Wild, {J. A.} and Hapgood, {M. A.}",
year = "2006",
month = mar,
language = "English",
pages = "337--342",
note = "Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Substorms (ICS8) ; Conference date: 01-01-1900",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Five plus four equals nine: Combining the THEMIS and Cluster missions

AU - Wild, J. A.

AU - Hapgood, M. A.

PY - 2006/3

Y1 - 2006/3

N2 - THEMIS represents the most ambitious coordinated multi-spacecraft and ground-based programme ever attempted. It is expected that this mission will dramatically increase our understanding of the substorm process. In the years leading up to the launch of the five THEMIS probes, the four-spacecraft Cluster mission has defined the state of the art in the field of multi-spacecraft/ground-based investigations of the geospace environment. Hitherto unprecedented coordination of space- and ground-based experiments have yielded multi-point (in situ and remotely sensed) measurements of magnetospheric structure and dynamics. The overlap of the Cluster and THEMIS missions presents an excellent opportunity to move the multi-point measurement technique to the next stage. Since the apogees of the Cluster and THEMIS satellites orbits are separated by nearly 12 hour of local time, the synergy of these two missions and ground- based experiments will allow the detailed observation of solar wind-magnetosphere-ionosphere on both the day and nightside of the Earth. Several experimental scenarios will be presented.

AB - THEMIS represents the most ambitious coordinated multi-spacecraft and ground-based programme ever attempted. It is expected that this mission will dramatically increase our understanding of the substorm process. In the years leading up to the launch of the five THEMIS probes, the four-spacecraft Cluster mission has defined the state of the art in the field of multi-spacecraft/ground-based investigations of the geospace environment. Hitherto unprecedented coordination of space- and ground-based experiments have yielded multi-point (in situ and remotely sensed) measurements of magnetospheric structure and dynamics. The overlap of the Cluster and THEMIS missions presents an excellent opportunity to move the multi-point measurement technique to the next stage. Since the apogees of the Cluster and THEMIS satellites orbits are separated by nearly 12 hour of local time, the synergy of these two missions and ground- based experiments will allow the detailed observation of solar wind-magnetosphere-ionosphere on both the day and nightside of the Earth. Several experimental scenarios will be presented.

KW - Cluster

KW - THEMIS DCS-publications-id

KW - inproc-502

KW - DCS-publications-credits

KW - iono-fa

KW - DCS-publications-personnel-id

KW - 104

M3 - Other

SP - 337

EP - 342

T2 - Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Substorms (ICS8)

Y2 - 1 January 1900

ER -