Satellite measurements of field-aligned auroral electron precipitation were analyzed using 16 months of data from the OGO-4 auroral particles experiment. It was observed that the anisotropies are of short time duration and are most likely to occur when particle fluxes are high. Field-aligned 2.3 keV electron precipitation is found in an oval shaped region primarily in the nighttime hours, with a maximum probability at approximately 70 deg invariant latitude near midnight, congruent to and poleward of the auroral optical emissions in these hours. This precipitation was found to be associated with the high latitude boundary of auroral electron precipitation during substorm expansion and is characterized by a harder and more intense energy spectrum than typical isotropic precipitation. (Author)
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