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1.
A coordinated experiment involving scintillation observations using orbital satellite beacons and CP-3-F program measurements by means of the EISCAT ionospheric radar facility is described. The results reveal the location of patches, containing kilometre-scale irregularities, in the vicinity of a region of an electron density minimum and an electron temperature increase. In the daytime under quiet geomagnetic conditions, the region of scintillations coincided closely with the southwards gradient in electron density, while a plasma drift velocity was mainly westwards VE-W ≲ 0.3 km/s. In the evening, the region of the most intense irregularities was transformed to the northwards sense of the electron density gradient simultaneously with the plasma drift velocity reverse and the arrival of a significant southwards component VN-S ≲ (1.5−1.0) km/s. EISCAT data demonstrated the patches' location in regions of an electron temperature increase. Processes operating to create kilometer-scale irregularities were analysed and estimated according to the data obtained. The assessments suggest that irregularities with a cross-field scale, equal to or greater than 1 km, and a field-aligned scale, equal to or greater than 30 km, were the result of growth of the thermomagnetic instability.  相似文献   

2.
Measurements of zonal irregularity drifts were made by the spaced receiver scintillation and radar interferometer techniques from Huancayo and Jicamarca, respectively. The Fabry-Perot Interferometer operated at Arequipa provided the zonal neutral winds. These simultaneous measurements were performed during evening hours in the presence of equatorial spread-F on three nights in October 1988. The zonal drift of 3-m irregularities obtained with the 50-MHz radar showed considerable variation as a function of altitude. The drift of hundreds of m-scale irregularities obtained by the scintillation technique agreed with the drift of 3-m irregularities when the latter were measured near the F-peak. The neutral winds, on the other hand, sometimes exceeded the irregularity drifts by a factor of two. This is a possible result of the partial reduction of the vertical polarization electric field in the F-region caused by the effects of integrated Pedersen conductivity of the off-equatorial night-time E-region coupled to the F-region at high altitudes above the magnetic equator.  相似文献   

3.
Radio astronomical interferometric observations are affected by atmospheric refraction, being particularly sensitive to inhomogeneities in the atmosphere. At frequencies below 2 GHz the influences of the ionosphere are significant in radio astronomy, especially for single dish observations and for connected element interferometry.Analytical expressions for the manifestations of weak ionospheric scintillation in radio interferometric observations, are derived. We indicate which ionospheric scintillation parameters can be derived from radio interferometric measurements. It is shown that the baseline dependence of the observed amplitude scintillation index implies a direct determination of the height of the region of random irregular electron distribution. Furthermore, the linear scale of the irregularities causing scintillation can be determined directly from the baseline dependence of the scintillation index S4. From the mean square phase fluctuations as a function of interferometer baseline, the spatial scale of the irregularities responsible for this effect can also be determined. From a comparison with observational mid-latitude data we find indications that scintillation irregularities occur in the lower parts of the F2-layer. The spatial scale of irregularities causing amplitude scintillation is of the order of about 25 to about 500 metres. Phase scintillations are caused by irregularities with dimensions which are an order of magnitude larger.  相似文献   

4.
An experiment is described for the routine study of scintillations and ionospheric irregularities at high-latitudes using NNSS satellites with additional coordinated observations by means of the EISCAT ionospheric radar facility. Early results, obtained during the development phase of the experiment, are presented of the power spectra of intensity fluctuations at 150 MHz observed at the equatorwards edge of the high-latitude irregularity zone. The spectra of 165 samples of night-time scintillation recorded during October 1982 to May 1983 show a spectral index with a mean value of −3.58 and a steepening of the spectral slope with increasing S4. Some examples of scintillation arising from irregularities at E-layer height show spectral indices of magnitude generally smaller than for F-region cases. A few spectra have been found with a clear break in spectral slope at around 10 Hz, suggesting two regimes for irregularities of different scale sizes.  相似文献   

5.
Small scale sub-auroral F-region irregularities were observed on 6–7 February 1984 by the two HF radars of the EDIA experiment while the EISCAT UHF system was scanning the ionosphere between 57° and 66° invariant latitude at a slightly different longitude. The bistatic EDIA system was mainly designed to detect the F-region irregularities at sub-auroral latitudes and to measure their perpendicular velocities. This paper is devoted to an examination of the morphology of the irregularity regions detected by the HF radars and of their production mechanisms, by comparison with the horizontal and vertical electron density profiles measured by EISCAT. It is shown that decametric irregularities observed at about 360–430 km height are not associated with any large scale horizontal density gradients in the F-region (350km). However, a strong north-south gradient observed at lower altitudes (150–200km), which is likely to indicate the southern boundary of the high energy particle precipitation zone, is well correlated with the strong scattering regions observed by the HF radars. The EISCAT electron temperature measurements at 350km height also show horizontal gradients which are well correlated with the small scale F-region irregularities. We discuss implications of these observations on the mechanisms of production of irregularities in the sub-auroral F-region.  相似文献   

6.
Recent studies of the physics of F-layer irregularities in the equatorial ionosphere have been concerned with the development of plumes or patches. A series of observations in the equatorial anomaly region in a year of high solar flux has been analyzed for the radio propagation effect of scintillations. The observations were made on patches in the developing, mature and decay phases. Although irregularities develop on the west wall of the patches, the intensity of scintillation does not appear to diminish within the patch; the patches contain bursts of high level activity.Patch characteristics at microwave wavelengths match airglow depletion images when two considerations are introduced, i.e. the westward tilt of the patch as shown by optical and radar observations and the effective path length of the irregularities affecting the radio propagation path. Using optical images of depletions the effective thickness of the layer of irregularities above the peak of the F2-layer can be estimated; it is relatively short, i.e. of the order of 70 km for the gigaHertz frequencies and 150 km for the 257 MHz transmissions. The total path length is 110 km for the microwave frequencies and 220 km for the lower levels of scintillation at 257 MHz. The decrease in microwave scintillations compared to meter wavelength observations in the midnight and post-midnight time period in these anomaly observations is due to the combination of decay of electron density as well as the relatively rapid decay of smaller scale irregularities, as has previously been noted in observations at the magnetic equator.  相似文献   

7.
The results of Booker and Majidiahi (1981) concerning refractive scattering by large-scale irregularities in a phase-changing screen are combined with the theory of diffractive scattering by small-scale irregularities in order to study three intensity scintillation phenomena. The first is the reflection of radio and optical waves from an ocean surface disturbed by a spectrum of water waves. The second is the scintillation of VHP, UHF and SHF radio waves traversing the ionospheric F-region. The third is the scintillation of VHF, UHF and SHF radio waves traversing the solar wind. In each case appropriate values are chosen for the mean square fluctuation of phase, for the outer scale, for the inner scale and for the spectral index. Spectral diagrams are drawn to show how the outer scale, the inner scale, the Fresnel scale, the focal scale, the lens scale and the peak scale vary with a relevant parameter (electromagnetic wave-frequency for the ocean, RMS fractional fluctuation of ionization density for the ionosphere, and distance of closest approach to the Sun for the solar wind). For the ionosphere and the solar wind, multiple refractive scattering by weak irregularities occurs in practice whereas it is strong single scattering that is assumed in the thin-screen theory ; potential consequences of this are discussed qualitatively.  相似文献   

8.
Until now the presence of F-region irregularities responsible for spread-F (sp-F) traces in ionograms has been considered as a purely night-time phenomenon extending sporadically to the early morning hours. We herein report that, on two occasions (26 March 1974 and 1 February 1984) similar irregularities were observed between 1400 and 1600 hours local time with the Jicamarca radar. These irregularities caused enhancements in the power of the radar echo of as much as two orders of magnitude, were found over a region of a few hundred kilometers on the topside of the F-region extending from around 600 to 1000 km altitude, and persisted for 1–2 h. The irregularities were aspect sensitive (aligned with the magnetic field) and produced echoes with a fading rate of the order of one to a few seconds. The background zonal electric field, inferred from the vertical drift velocity, was fairly constant in altitude, with values smaller than 0.1 mV m−1. During the duration of the events, zonal components of both signs occurred, with the component passing through zero several times. We have no information on the vertical component of E. These irregularities could not be observed with ground-based ionosondes, since they are on the topside of the F-region. They may be related to fossil bubbles that are responsible for HF ducting observed by satellites.  相似文献   

9.
A coordinated experiment involving scintillation observations using NNSS satellites and special program measurements with the EISCAT ionospheric radar facility is described. The results reveal the presence of sub-kilometre scale irregularities in the vicinity of a long lived steep equatorwards gradient in electron density. Evidence is presented of a southwards plasma flow which would cause the gradient to be unstable to the E Λ B gradient-drift mechanism. An instability growth time of about 4 min has been estimated from the observations. Cooler electron temperatures associated with enhanced densities rules out soft particle precipitation as an irregularity source in this case.  相似文献   

10.
Recent rocket and satellite measurements of equatorial F-region irregularities have been able to resolve wavelengths comparable to the meter-size sensitivities of the Jicamarca and Altair radar backscatter techniques. In a July 1979 rocket campaign at the Kwajalein Atoll, vertical profile measurements by ‘in situ’ plasma probes showed the F-region marked by a number of large scale plasma depletions, each having its own distribution of smaller scale irregularities and a trend toward a co-location of the more intense irregularities with positive gradients of larger scale features. Similar measurements on the S3-4 Ionospheric Irregularities Satellite have shown large scale depletions (1–3 orders of magnitude) with east-west asymmetries that point toward the western wall as the sight for the more intense plasma density fluctuations. The combined rocket and satellite measurements provide a two-dimensional model of macroscopic F-region depletions with small structures tending to develop more readily on the top and western boundaries. The model and associated power spectral analyses is in concert with a developing catalog of radar observations and the predictions of numerical simulations which employ the Rayleigh-Taylor instability as the primary mechanism for the generation of intermediate wavelength irregularities.  相似文献   

11.
The scintillation technique, as is well known, provides an integrated measure of phase and amplitude fluctuations imposed on radio signals over a wide range of frequencies during their propagation through the ionosphere. The large amplitude of equatorial irregularities necessitates the use of frequencies in the GHz band to obtain unambiguously the temporal variation of irregularity intensity and the effect of irregularity anisotropy. Recent observations of equatorial scintillations will be reviewed with an emphasis on GHz measurements. The steep spatial gradients observed in in-situ data and their relationship to intense GHz scintillations will be explored. Co-ordinated measurements of equatorial irregularities by such techniques as radar backscatter, in-situ rocket and satellite, total electron content and 6300 Å airglow will be discussed, insofar as they provide a better understanding of the scintillation phenomena. While it is difficult to critically assess results that are so recent and constantly evolving, we have attempted to focus attention on the outstanding problems that still remain in the field.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The model of ionospheric fluctuations used by Booker and Ferguson (1978) to describe spread-F is applied to ionospheric scintillation in the band from 100 MHz to 10 GHz in equatorial regions. Calculations are based on long Isotropie field-aligned irregularities possessing an inverse power-law spectrum extending from an outer scale [wavelength/(2π)]linked to the properties of the neutral atmosphere down to an inner scale of the order of the ionic gyroradius. Spectral indices from 0 to 6 are considered, with special attention to the range from 1 to 4. The r.m.s. fluctuation of ionization density is assumed to be proportional to the ambient ionization density throughout the plasmasphere, but the effect is shown of removing the fluctuations at heights above 500, 750 and 1000 km. Using a height-distribution of phase-changing screens, calculations are made, for evening and presunrise conditions, of the mean square fluctuations both of phase and of fractional amplitude for situations in which an Earth terminal and a stationary satellite are both in the magnetic equatorial plane. Heights of equivalent single phase-changing screens are deduced for both phase and amplitude fluctuations; they are different from each other and from the height of maximum ionization density. It is concluded that the weak scattering theory can satisfactorily explain weak scintillation, but that amplitude scintillation at strengths of practical importance for radio communications requires the inclusion of refractive scattering in addition to diffractive scattering.  相似文献   

14.
Accurate measurement of the electron density profile and its variations is crucial to further progress in understanding the physics of the disturbed equatorial ionosphere. To accomplish this, a plasma frequency probe was included in the payload complement of two rockets flown during the CONDOR rocket campaign conducted from Peru in March 1983. In this paper we present density profiles of the disturbed equatorial ionosphere from a night-time flight in which spread-F conditions were present and from a day-time flight during strong electrojet conditions. Results from both flights are in excellent agreement with simultaneous radar data in that the regions of highly disturbed plasma coincide with the radar signatures. The spread-F rocket penetrated a topside depletion during both the upleg and downleg. The electrojet measurements showed a profile peaking at 1.3 × 105cm−3 at 106 km, with large scale fluctuations having amplitudes of roughly 10 % seen only on the upward gradient in electron density. This is in agreement with plasma instability theory. We further show that simultaneous measurements by fixed-bias Langmuir probes, when normalized at a single point to the altitude profile of electron density, are inadequate to correctly parameterize the observed enhancements and depletions.  相似文献   

15.
The second moment of the complex amplitude or the mutual coherence function (MCF) for transionospheric VHF radio waves transmitted from the geostationary satellite ATS-6 is computed from daytime amplitude and phase scintillations recorded at an equatorial station, in order to study the structure of electrojet irregularities. The shape of the correlation function for fluctuations in the integrated electron content along the signal path is deduced by using a theoretical relationship between this correlation function and the MCF which is based on the assumption that the irregularities are “frozen”. Further, using a power-law spectrum to describe the electrojet irregularities, the outerscale lo associated with the spectrum as well as the r.m.s. density fluctuation are estimated from theoretical fits to the computed values. The irregularity drift speeds Vo transverse to the signal path, for the scintillation events studied here, are derived from power spectra of weak scintillations. On the basis of a relationship between lo and Vo suggested by a linear theory of the gradient-drift instability, the effective Hall conductivity is estimated to be about five times the effective Pedersen conductivity in the electrojet region.  相似文献   

16.
Since the last equatorial aeronomy meeting in 1980, our understanding of the morphology of equatorial scintillations has advanced greatly due to more intensive observations at the equatorial anomaly locations in the different longitude zones. The unmistakable effect of the sunspot cycle in controlling irregularity belt width and electron concentration responsible for strong scintillation in the GHz range has been demonstrated. The fact that night-time F-region dynamics is an important factor in controlling the magnitude of scintillations has been recognized by interpreting scintillation observations in the light of realistic models of total electron content at various longitudes. A hypothesis based on the alignment of the solar terminator with the geomagnetic flux tubes as an indicator of enhanced scintillation occurrence and another based on the influence of a transequatorial thermospheric neutral wind have been postulated to describe the observed longitudinal variation.A distinct class of equatorial irregularities known as the bottomside sinusoidal (BSS) type has been identified. Unlike equatorial bubbles, these irregularities occur in very large patches, sometimes in excess of several thousand kilometers in the E-W direction and are associated with frequency spread on ionograms. Scintillations caused by such irregularities exist only in the VHF band, exhibit Fresnel oscillations in intensity spectra and are found to give rise to extremely long durations (~ several hours) of uninterrupted scintillations. These irregularities maximize during solstices, so that in the VHF range, scintillation morphology at an equatorial station is determined by considering occurrence characteristics of both bubble type and BSS type irregularities.The temporal structure of scintillations in relation to the in situ measurements of irregularity spatial structure within equatorial bubbles has been critically examined. A two-component irregularity spectrum with a shallow slope (p1 ~ 1.5) at long scalelengths (> 1km) and steep slope (p2 ~−3) at shorter scalelengths has been found in both vertical and horizontal spectra. Phase and intensity scintillation modelling was found to be consistent with this two-component irregularity spectrum.Finally, the information provided by the major experimental undertaking represented by Project Condor in the fields of night-time scintillations and zonal irregularity drifts with be briefly outlined.  相似文献   

17.
Two Centaure rockets were launched from Thumba (0 47′S dip). India, with a new arrangement of double probe sensors for the simultaneous measurements of the irregularities in the electron density and the electric field along and perpendicular to the spin axis of the rocket. These experiments were carried out during the period when type I irregularities were observed with the VHF backscatter radar at Thumba. Irregularities with scale sizes ranging from a few meters to a few kilometers in the electron density and in the electric field components both in the east-west and the vertical direction could be studied with these experiments. Irregularities in the electric field in the medium scale size range (30–300 m) were observed with peak to peak amplitudes up to 20 mV m−1 and in the small scale (⩽ 15 m) with peak to peak amplitudes up to 5 mV m−1. Horizontally propagating waves with horizontal scale sizes up to 2.5 km were observed in the region below 105.5 km. Using linear theory for the electrojet irregularities, it was found that for 5 % perturbations in the electron density, the amplitude of the electric field can be as large as 20–30 mV m−1. The spectrum of the irregularities in the vertical electric field in the rocket frame of reference was calculated and it was found that for the range of scale sizes between 10 and 70 m, the mean spectral index was −2.7 and −2.6. while in the scale size range 2–10 m it was −4.0 and −5.1 for the flights C-77 and C-73, respectively.  相似文献   

18.
On rare occasions, observations from the DMSP-F6 and -F8 spacecraft and the Søndrestrøm incoherent scatter radar coincide in space. Such coincidence offers a unique opportunity to study temporal vs spatial variations on a small scale. We discuss data from one of those occasions, with observations made in the dawn sector in the presence of moderate auroral precipitation during a magnetically quiet period. The DMSP satellites measured vertical electron and ion flux and cross-track plasma drift while the radar measured the ionospheric electron density distribution and line-of-sight plasma velocities. We combine these data sets to construct a two-dimensional map of a possible auroral pattern above Søndrestrøm. It is characterized by the following properties. No difference is seen between the gross precipitation patterns measured along the DMSP-F6 and -F8 trajectories (separated by 32 km in magnetic east-west direction and some 4 s in travel time in magnetic north-south direction), except that they are not exactly aligned with the L shells. However, F6 and F8 observed minor differences in the small-scale structures. More significant differences are found between small-scale features in the DMSP precipitation measurements and in radar observations of the E-region plasma density distribution. These measurements are separated by 74 km, equivalent to 2.4°, in magnetic longitude, and 0–40 s in time along the spacecraft trajectories (varying with magnetic latitude). Large-scale magnetospheric-ionospheric surfaces such as plasma flow reversal, poleward boundary of the keV ion and electron precipitation, and poleward boundary of E-region ionization, coincide. The combined data suggest that the plasma flow reversal delineates the polar cap boundary, that is, the boundary between precipitation characteristic for the plasma mantle and for the plasma sheet boundary layer.  相似文献   

19.
The quiet night-time E-region at high latitudes has been studied using the EISCAT UHF radar. Data from three subsequent nights during a long period of low magnetic activity are shown and typical features of electron density are described. The background electron density is observed to be 5·109 m−3 or smaller. Two types of enhancements above this level are observed ; one is due to charged particle precipitation associated with the F-region trough and the other is composed of sporadic-E layers due to waves in the neutral atmosphere. The sporadic-E is observed to exist almost continuously and to exhibit a regular diurnal behaviour. In addition to the typical afternoon and morning sequential layers, a third major descending layer is formed at night after the passage of the F-region trough The afternoon layer disappears simultaneously with the enhancement of the northward trough-associated electric field and the night-time layer appears at high altitudes after the field has again been reduced to a small value. It is suggested that metal ions from low altitudes are swept by the electric field to the upper E-region where they are again compressed to the night-time layer. A set of steeply descending weaker layers, merging to the main night-time layer are also observed. These layers are most probably caused by atmospheric gravity waves. Theoretical profiles for molecular ions indicate that the strongest layers are necessarily composed of metal ions but, during times when the layers are at their weakest, they may be mainly composed of molecular ions.  相似文献   

20.
Measurements with a 25 MHz radar over Iioka, Japan show that field-aligned E-region irregularities occur mainly at night in association with Es-layers at an altitude range of about 100–110 km and drift predominantly westward with speeds of the order of 60 m s−1. These observed characteristics of the irregularities are shown to be in reasonable agreement with quantitative predictions of the gradient drift instability theory. The predictions are based on appropriate models for neutral air densities and temperatures, ionic composition and ionospheric electric fields and on available observations of electron density profiles of E- and sEs-layers.  相似文献   

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