The subject of geomagnetic micropulsations has developed extremely
rapidly and it is difficult to know when is an appropriate time to pause
and assess the sum total of our knowledge-both observational and
theoretical. There has in recent years been a tremendous increase in
both the quantity and quality of data and also many theoretical ad-
vances in our understanding of the phenomenon. Undoubtedly there will be
further progress in both areas but it seems worthwhile now to review
both our knowledge and our ignorance. This book was essen- tially
completed by the end of April 1969 and tries to give a summary of the
subject up to that time. The Earth is enclosed in the magnetosphere, a
hollow carved out of the solar wind by the Earth's magnetic field. Above
the ionosphere there is a very tenuous thermal plasma of partially
ionized hydrogen in diffusive equilibrium with magnetic and
gravitational forces, and ener- getic protons and electrons that
constitute the trapped Van Allen ra- diation belts. Throughout this
anisotropic and inhomogeneous plasma, natural and man-made
electromagnetic energy propagates in a wide variety of modes and
frequency bands. This book is concerned with that class of natural
signals called geomagnetic micropulsations-short period (usually of the
order of seconds or minutes) fluctuations of the Earth's magnetic field.