A brief description of the structure of the magnetosphere—that is, permanent and temporary radiation belts, plasmasphere, and plasma layers—is presented. It is shown that the results of measurements of properties of energetic particles and plasma are sufficient for such a description. The outer night slope of the electron radiation belt is singled out as an individual domain where energetic particles do not complete a closedmagnetic drift and where substorm processes develop. This region, which is referred to as an auroralmagnetosphere, is often erroneously treated as only part of the radiation belt. In different domains of the magnetosphere, different mechanisms of the precipitation of particles causing Earth’s airglow in the form of auroras act independently. The properties and origin of these precipitated particles are different, and it is unreasonable to consider them as a unified formation—a ring or an auroral oval. It is equally erroneous to treat the oval as a kind of formation, a structure, or a domain of the magnetosphere and not as a manifestation of processes that proceed in domains.