Space Weather Current Conditions
POLAR/VIS EC
POLAR/UVI
Kiruna Magnetometer
PFRR ASC
HLMS VHF Auroral Radar

Active aurora should produce a bright ring around the magnetic pole in the POLAR image (note: the UVI field-of-view is smaller than the planetary disk.) Auroral substorms will produce bright bulges, especially near midnight.

Auroral activity near Kiruna, Sweden will produce deflections on the magnetometer trace -- significant activity gets up to several hundred nT of deflection.

Auroral activity over Alaska will appear as light-colored returns on the HLMS VHF radar. If there are aurora over Fairbanks when the All-Sky Camera is working, then auroral arcs should be visible in that image.

The current VIS image was acquired with the Earth Camera, one of three cameras in the Visible Imaging System (VIS) which was designed and constructed at the University of Iowa. The VIS is one of twelve instruments on the Polar satellite of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. The VIS Principal Investigator is Dr. L. A. Frank, and the Instrument Scientist and Manager is Dr. John B. Sigwarth.
The current UVI image is provided courtesy of the UltraViolet Imager team for NASA's Polar satellite.
The current PFRR All-Sky Camera Image and High Latitude Monitoring System VHF Auroral Radar data are provided courtesy of the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska at Fairbanks.
The Kiruna Magnetometer is operated by the Swedish Institute of Space Physics, Kiruna, Sweden.


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Associated links:
Andrew L. Urquhart
(urquhart@rice.edu)

Department of Space Physics and Astronomy, Rice University