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Creators/Authors contains: "Rodriguez‐Zuluaga, J"

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  1. Abstract The Active Magnetosphere and Planetary Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE) provides continuous global maps of Birkeland currents, using magnetic field perturbations (dB) obtained by calibrating and detrending data from engineering magnetometers on the 66 polar‐orbiting Iridium satellites in the communications constellation. Here, we provide an assessment of AMPERE dBaccuracy, as compared with magnetic field observations from the Swarm satellite mission. The CHAOS v8.1 model (Finlay et al., 2020,https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623‐020‐01252‐9) was used to remove the main field and other non‐ionospheric contributions from both data sets. In a nearest‐neighbor comparison covering August 2022, AMPERE's calibrated and detrended dBdata from the Iridium NEXT satellites are found to have root‐mean‐square deviations of 31 and 33 nT (for dBθand dBφ, respectively) as compared with data from Swarm, while the biases are −7 and −2 nT. For the same interval, AMPERE's fitted maps have root‐mean‐square errors of <40 nT, rising to 109–185 nT in active conditions (defined as Swarm dB > 250 nT). However, there is evidence that small scale (<400‐km along Swarm track direction) dBstructures are not fully resolved. Overall, we find that the AMPERE dBdata and fitted products are unbiased and are typically in excellent agreement with the Swarm data. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available August 1, 2026