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-List Of Titles -Airglow and aurorae at Dome A, Antarctica

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/188569

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Title
Airglow and aurorae at Dome A, Antarctica
Related
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Vol. 124, No. 916, (2012), p.637-649
DOI
10.1086/666861
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Date
2012
Author/Creator
Sims, Geff
Author/Creator
Ashley, Michael C.B
Author/Creator
Moore, Anna M
Author/Creator
Riddle, Reed
Author/Creator
Shang, Zhaohui
Author/Creator
Storey, John W. V
Author/Creator
Tothill, Nick
Author/Creator
Travouillon, Tony
Author/Creator
Wang, Lifan
Author/Creator
Yang, Huigen
Author/Creator
Yang, Ji
Author/Creator
Zhou, Xu
Author/Creator
Cui, Xiangqun
Author/Creator
Zhu, Zhenxi
Author/Creator
Everett, Jon R
Author/Creator
Feng, Longlong
Author/Creator
Gong, Xuefei
Author/Creator
Hengst, Shane
Author/Creator
Hu, Zhongwen
Author/Creator
Lawrence, Jon S
Author/Creator
Luong-Van, Daniel M
Description
Despite the absence of artificial light pollution at Antarctic plateau sites such as Dome A, other factors such as airglow, aurorae, and extended periods of twilight have the potential to adversely affect optical observations. We present a statistical analysis of the airglow and aurorae at Dome A using spectroscopic data from Nigel, an optical/near-IR spectrometer operating in the 300-850 nm range. These data complement photometric images from Gattini, a wide-field (90°) CCD camera with B, V, and R filters, allowing the background sky brightness to be disentangled from the various airglow and auroral emission lines. The median auroral contribution to the B, V, and R photometric bands is found to be 22.9, 23.4, and 23.0 mag arcsec⁻², respectively. Auroral emissions most frequently occur between 10-23 hr local time, when up to 50% of observations are above airglow-level intensities. While infrequent, the strongest emissions detected occurred in the hours just prior to magnetic midnight. We are also able to quantify the amount of annual dark time available as a function of wavelength, as well as in the standard BV R photometric bands. On average, twilight ends when the Sun reaches a zenith distance of 102.6°.
Description
13 page(s)
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Physics and Astronomy

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/188569
Identifier
ISSN:0004-6280
Identifier
mq_res-ext-2-s2.0-84863318924
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific"
 
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