The Earth's Plasmasphere
This is the first monograph to describe the historical development of ideas concerning the plasmasphere by the pioneering researchers themselves. The plasmasphere is a cold thermal plasma cloud encircling the Earth, terminating abruptly at a radial distance of 30,000 km over a sharp discontinuity known as the plasmapause. The volume commences with an account of the difficulties met in USSR by Gringauz to publish his early discoveries from Soviet rocket measurements, and the contemporaneous breakthroughs by Carpenter in the USA from ground-based whistler measurements. The authors then update our picture of the plasmasphere by presenting experimental and observational results of the past three decades, and mathematical and physical theories proposed to explain its formation. The volume will be invaluable for researchers in space physics, and will also appeal to those interested in the history of science.
- Was the first monograph to describe the historical development of ideas concerning the plasmasphere
- Presentation of experimental and observational results, mathematical and physical theories to explain plasmasphere formation
- Invaluable for researchers in space physics, and will also interest historians of science
Reviews & endorsements
"The book will be of interest to physicists and engineers concerned with this region as well as those curious about the history of this science." Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
"This book is a comprehensive summary of our present knowledge of the Earth's plasmasphere and should be a valuable reference volume to researchers in magnetospheric physics." Carl-Gunne Fäthammar, Space Science Review
Product details
September 2005Paperback
9780521675550
376 pages
254 × 179 × 20 mm
0.649kg
191 b/w illus. 1 table
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1. Discovery of the plasmasphere and initial studies of its properties
- 2. Electromagnetic sounding of the plasmasphere
- 3. Plasmasphere measurements from spacecraft
- 4. A global description of the plasmasphere
- 5. Theoretical aspects related to the plasmasphere
- Epilogue
- References
- Index.