Abstract
Correlation studies of the radar echo occurrence rate from aurora in half-hourly intervals at Ottawa, S and Sd components of the horizontal magnetic field H at Agincourt, and the disturbance diurnal variation of earth current at Crow River have been carried out. Short-time variations in auroral echo strength and moderate perturbations in H have also been correlated. The auroral echo occurrence rate seems to have a diurnal variation characteristic similar to that of H. It is found that auroral activity always precedes magnetic activity. The variation of the delay time between the two phenomena shows a local time dependence, being practically constant and quite small (0–15 minutes) before local midnight and increasing afterwards. This variation of the delay time appears to have a connection with reports of others regarding reversal of the direction of auroral ionization drift from west to east somewhere around midnight with subsequent magnetic perturbations which change from positive to negative.No definite conclusion could be reached regarding the relationship of earth current to other factors because of a practically random variation of cross-correlation coefficients from month to month.

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