Articles | Volume 34, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-34-41-2016
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-34-41-2016
ANGEO Communicates
 | 
18 Jan 2016
ANGEO Communicates |  | 18 Jan 2016

High-speed stereoscopy of aurora

R. Kataoka, Y. Fukuda, H. A. Uchida, H. Yamada, Y. Miyoshi, Y. Ebihara, H. Dahlgren, and D. Hampton

Abstract. We performed 100 fps stereoscopic imaging of aurora for the first time. Two identical sCMOS cameras equipped with narrow field-of-view lenses (15° by 15°) were directed at magnetic zenith with the north–south base distance of 8.1 km. Here we show the best example that a rapidly pulsating diffuse patch and a streaming discrete arc were observed at the same time with different parallaxes, and the emission altitudes were estimated as 85–95 km and > 100 km, respectively. The estimated emission altitudes are consistent with those estimated in previous studies, and it is suggested that high-speed stereoscopy is useful to directly measure the emission altitudes of various types of rapidly varying aurora. It is also found that variation of emission altitude is gradual (e.g., 10 km increase over 5 s) for pulsating patches and is fast (e.g., 10 km increase within 0.5 s) for streaming arcs.

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Short summary
Stereoscopy of aurora was performed at the record fast sampling rate of 100 fps to measure the emission altitude of rapidly varying fine-scale structures. The new method unveiled that very different types of aurora appear in the same direction at different altitudes.