Ground‐based optical and digital ionosonde measurements were conducted at Thule, Greenland to measure ionospheric structure and dynamics in the nighttime polar cap F layer. These observations showed the existence of large‐scale (800–1000 km) plasma patches drifting in the antisunward direction during a moderately disturbed (Kp ≥ 4) period. Simultaneous Dynamics Explorer (DE‐B) low‐altitude plasma instrument (LAPI) measurements show that these patches with peak densities of ∼106 el cm−3 are not locally produced by structured particle precipitation. The LAPI measurements show a uniform precipitation of polar rain electrons over the polar cap. The combined measurements provide a comprehensive description of patch structure and dynamics. They are produced near or equatorward of the dayside auroral zone and convect across the polar cap in the antisunward direction. Gradients within the large scale, drifting patches are subject to structuring by convective instabilities. UHF scintillation and spaced receiver measurements are used to map the resulting irregularity distribution within the patches.
All‐sky imaging photometer measurements and ionospheric soundings taken at Thule, Greenland (86° corrected geomagnetic latitude), in December 1979 and January 1982 reveal the large‐scale organization of the winter polar cap ionosphere. Three groups of forms have been identified: (1) The most predominant features are sun‐aligned, generally unstructured, subvisual, F region arcs, extending for more than 1000 km (limit of all‐sky field of view) across the polar cap. In general, these arcs drift from dawn to dusk at speeds between 100 and 250 m s−1; however, stagnation of arc drift and drift reversals have been observed. The arcs are produced by soft particle precipitation. (2) During a magnetically disturbed period the arcs disappeared, and large patches of enhanced F region ionization drifted at speeds of 250 to 700 m s−1 across the field of view in the antisunward direction. Although arcs are produced by soft particle precipitation, preliminary results from the Dynamics Explorer satellite do not indicate any localized soft electron precipitation into the patches. (3) On a few occasions both forms were observed simultaneously. Between F region sun‐aligned arcs, which were drifting from dawn to dusk, small patches of ionization were observed moving at much higher speed in the antisunward direction. Both the arcs and the patches appear as strong localized irregularities in the ionospheric soundings. The Doppler information provided by the aircraft's Digisonde 128PS was used to relate backscatter traces to individual arcs or patches and to track individual features over more than 1500 km. For a large number of observations the time variation of measured Doppler velocities suggests specular reflection from electron density enhancements associated with the optical forms, rather than scatter from field‐aligned irregularities imbedded in the arcs or patches. A simple velocity filter applied to the ionogram data permitted the generation of range‐time characteristics for selected ionization drift velocities. A tendency for high velocities to occur during magnetically active periods was found. The ionospheric soundings showed that the F region arcs are bands of enhanced ionization, imbedded in a background ionosphere with a base height (h′F) of approximately 250 km and a critical frequency of approximately 4 MHz (∼2 × 105 el cm−3). The virtual heights in the ionograms did not change during transit of the arcs through the zenith. During the active periods, when the antisunward moving patches were observed, the background ionization dropped to less than 3 MHz (105 el cm−3) while the base height (h′F) moved up to heights above 400 km. The strongly ionized patches (f0 F2 > 8 MHz), however, were observed to reach a minimum virtual range of ∼250 km during the zenith transit, leading during their passage through the zenith to rapid h′F fluctuations of the order of 200 km within minutes.
A new instrument for all-sky spectrophotometric imaging of aurora and airglow has been installed in the Air Force Geophysics Laboratory's Airborne Ionospheric Observatory. Initial observations of equatorial and near-equatorial 6300-• O I airglow show the existence of north-south aligned regions of airglow depletion. These dark bands often extend more than 1200 km in the north-south direction and 50-200 km in the east-west direction. They are observed to drift toward the east during the eveningmidnight hours, with one observation of westward drift after local midnight. Airglow fine structure associated with the boundaries of the dark bands has been observed down to the 2.5-kin resolution limit of the instrument. Simultaneous airborne ionospheric soundings indicate that these regions of airglow depletion are characterized by an increase in the virtual height of the F layer. A simple model of fieldaligned electron density depletion in the bottomside of the F layer explains both the airglow observations and the ionospheric soundings.
Coordinated measurements of F region plasma patches were conducted on February 3/4, 1984, from Thule and Sondrestrom, Greenland. Optical, ionosonde, amplitude scintillation, total electron content (TEC), and incoherent scatter radar measurements were combined to reveal several new aspects of the structure and transport of these localized regions of enhanced F region ionization. For the first time these patches were directly tracked flowing in the antisunward direction over distances of 3000 km from the center of the polar cap to the poleward edge of the auroral oval. Quantitative measurements of TEC show increases of 10–15 TEC units within the patches, above a background polar cap value of 5 TEC units. Amplitude scintillation measurements show the presence of ionospheric irregularities through the entire patch, with a weak indication of stronger scintillation on the trailing (or E × B unstable) edge.
An investigation of the polar cap ionosphere near the peak of the last solar cycle identified polar cap F layer arcs and ionization patches as unique features of the polar cap ionosphere, and as sources of severe scintillations observed on 250‐MHz satellite beacon signals. The continuing investigations in January and December 1983 and January 1984 have shown that arcs and patches persist as the dominant features of the winter polar cap ionosphere during periods of low sunspot numbers. Improved ionospheric soundings made at Thule, Greenland (86°CGL), showed a clear diurnal variation for the occurrence of the patch‐type ionization. Discussion of various possible mechanisms producing the observed ionization patches leads to the conclusion that the solar produced ionosphere equatorward of the dayside cusp is the source region of the ionization patches. Polar plasma convection transports this ionization across the cusp and the central polar cap. The local time dependence of the occurrence of the patches at Thule is shown to be a manifestation of the well‐known universal time control of the polar cap F region. A strong positive solar cycle dependence of the scintillations was measured during three extended campaigns and confirms earlier measurements. The diurnal variation of scintillations is almost flat at solar maximum and has a local time variation very similar to that of the patch type ionization at solar minimum. Both arcs and patches contribute to substantial scintillations around solar maximum, while only the patches are responsible for the considerably weaker scintillations during solar minimum.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.