Pulsating auroras have often been erroneously discussed as if they are a single phenomenon. For this reason, the relationship between different pulsating auroras is poorly understood. Grono and Donovan (2018,… Click to show full abstract
Pulsating auroras have often been erroneously discussed as if they are a single phenomenon. For this reason, the relationship between different pulsating auroras is poorly understood. Grono and Donovan (2018, https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-36-891-2018) subcategorized pulsating auroras into amorphous pulsating, patchy pulsating, and patchy auroras, which are separable based on their pulsation and structuring. By comparing the latitudes of these auroras to the location of the proton aurora, we have constrained their source regions for the first time. Pulsating aurora does not occur poleward of the proton aurora. Amorphous pulsating aurora occurs within and equatorward of the proton aurora, while patchy pulsating and patchy auroras predominantly occur equatorward of the optical b2i boundary. This indicates that the characteristic structuring of the patchy auroras is unable to form outside of the mostly dipolar inner magnetosphere, but the wave‐particle interactions that produce auroral pulsations are less constrained, extending into the transition region where the magnetic field begins to stretch.
               
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