Properties and parameters
Artist's rendition of the Earth's plasma fountain,
showing oxygen, helium, and hydrogen ions that gush into space from
regions near the Earth's poles. The faint yellow area shown above the
north pole represents gas lost from Earth into space; the green area is
the aurora borealis, where plasma energy pours back into the atmosphere.[6]
Polar wind
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(Redirected from Plasma fountain)
The Earth's plasma fountain, showing oxygen, helium, and hydrogen ions
which gush into space from regions near the Earth's poles. The faint
yellow area shown above the north pole represents gas lost from Earth
into space; the green area is the aurora borealis-or plasma energy pouring back into the atmosphere.[1]
The term was coined in 1968 in a pair of articles by Banks and Holzer[3] and by Ian Axford.[4] Since the process by which the ionospheric plasma flows away from the Earth along magnetic field lines is similar to the flow of solar plasma away from the sun's corona (the solar wind), Axford suggested the term "polar wind." The idea for the polar wind originated with the desire to solve the paradox of the terrestrial helium budget. This paradox consists of the fact that helium in the Earth's atmosphere seems to be produced (via radioactive decay of uranium and thorium) faster than it is lost by escaping from the upper atmosphere. The realization that some helium could be ionized, and therefore escape the earth along open magnetic field lines near the magnetic poles (the 'polar wind'), is one possible solution to the paradox.
Further research came from the Retarding Ion Mass Spectrometer instrument on the Dynamics Explorer spacecraft, in the 1980s. Recently, the SCIFER sounding rocket was launched into the plasma heating region of the fountain.
References
- Plasma fountain Source, press release: Solar Wind Squeezes Some of Earth's Atmosphere into Space
- AMS Glossary
- Banks, P. M.; Holzer, T. E. (1968). "The Polar Wind". Journal of Geophysical Research 73 (21): 6846–6854. Bibcode:1968JGR....73.6846B. doi:10.1029/JA073i021p06846.
- Axford, W. I. (1968). "The Polar Wind and the Terrestrial Helium Budget". Journal of Geophysical Research 73 (21): 6855–6859. Bibcode:1968JGR....73.6855A. doi:10.1029/JA073i021p06855.
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plasma fountain
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