It has become increasingly clear that the magnetosphere becomes
intermittently unstable and explosively releases a large amount of
energy into the polar upper atmos- phere. This particular magnetospheric
phenomenon is called the magnetospheric sub- storm. It is manifested as
an activity or disturbance ofvarious polar upper atmospheric phenomena,
such as intense auroral displays and X-ray bursts. Highly active
conditions in the polar upper atmosphere result from a successive
occurrence of such an element- ary activity, the polar substorm, which
lasts typically of order one to three hours. The concept of the
magnetospheric substorm and its manifestation in the polar upper
atmosphere, the polar substorm, has rapidly crystallized during the last
few years. We can find a hint of such a concept in the term 'polar
elementary storm' introduced by Kristian Birkeland as early as 1908.
However, we are greatly indebted to Sydney Chapman, who established the
basic foundation of magnetospheric physics and has led researches in
this field during the last half century. Indeed, the terms 'polar
magnetic substorm' and 'auroral substorm' were first suggested by Sydney
Chapman. The concept of the substorm was then soon extended by Neil M.
Brice of Cornell University, and Kinsey A. Anderson and his colleagues
at the University ofCaliforrlia, Berkeley, who introduced the term
'magnetospheric substorm'. We owe many of these recent developments in
magnetospheric physics to the great international enterprise, the
International Geophysical Year (IGY) and subse- quent international
cooperative effort (IGC, IQSY).