Viking midaltitude observations of ions and electrons in the postnoon
auroral region show that field-aligned acceleration of electrons and i
ons with energies up to a few kiloelectron volts takes place. The char
acteristics of the upgoing ion beams and the local transverse electric
field observed by Viking indicate that parallel ion acceleration is p
rimarily due to a quasi-electrostatic field-aligned acceleration proce
ss below Viking altitudes, i.e., below 10,000-13,500 km. A good correl
ation is found between the maximum upgoing ion beam energy and the dep
th of the local potential well determined by the Viking electric field
experiment within dayside ''ion inverted Vs.'' The total transverse p
otential throughout the entire region near the ion inverted Vs is gene
rally much higher than the field-aligned potential and may reach well
above 10 kV. However, the detailed mapping of the transverse potential
out to the boundary layer, a fundamental issue which remains controve
rsial, was not attempted here. An important finding in this study is t
he strong correlation between the maximum upgoing ion beam energy of d
ayside ion inverted Vs and the solar wind velocity. This suggests a di
rect coupling of the solar wind plasma dynamo/voltage generator to the
region of field-aligned particle acceleration. The fact that the cent
er of dayside ion inverted Vs coincide with convection reversals/flow
stagnation and upward Birkeland currents on what appears to be closed
field lines (Woch et al., 1993), suggests that field-aligned potential
structures connect to the inner part of an MHD dynamo in the low-lati
tude boundary layer. Thus the Viking observations substantiate the ide
a of a solar wind induced boundary layer polarization where negatively
charged perturbations in the post-noon sector persistently develops a
long the magnetic field lines, establishing accelerating potential dro
ps along the geomagnetic field lines in the 0.5-10 kV range.