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An intense Z-pinch aurora horn mapped by surveys of recordings from antiquity

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2 Author(s)
Peratt, M.G. ; Space & Airborne Syst., Raytheon Co., El Segundo, CA ; Peratt, A.L.

Summary form only given. The GPS locations and survey field-of view data of some four million rock carvings at petroglyph sites world-wide is allowing the visual reconstruction of a sub-gigaampere auroral Z-pinch column whose plasma flow was bent inward towards the south polar axis, subsequently flowing around the Earth. This data is analyzed by means of two and three dimensional satellite and aerial orthophotography with side looking radar sets allowing near ground level to vertical inspection of all-terrain views from each site. It is found that petroglyphs, shown to be depictions of synchrotron light from MHD instabilities, possess southerly preferred orientations and right-ascension-declination information. The computer model of the reconstructed Z-pinch, via high-speed, high-fidelity three-dimensional PIC simulations, add new petroglyph comparisons as shown by oblique views of the incoming Z-pinch. The reconstruction figure shows the incoming 56 current sheath with two pinches (egg-shaped plasmoids) approximately 300,000 km from Earth. Closer in, the 56 currents have merged to 28. Two 'bonnet' petroglyphs from the plethora of such at the Columbia River Gorge, found at the same locations as the 'Stonehenge' variety petroglyphs are also shown

Published in:
Plasma Science, 2006. ICOPS 2006. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. The 33rd IEEE International Conference on

Date of Conference: 4-8 June 2006

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