This study provides new scenarios for storm time traveling ionospheric disturbance excitation and subsequent propagation at subauroral and polar latitudes. We used ground-based total electron content observations from Global Navigation Satellite System receivers combined with wide field, subauroral ionospheric plasma parameters measured with the Millstone Hill Incoherent Scatter Radar during strong September 2017 geospace storms. Observations provide the first evidence of significant influences on traveling ionospheric disturbance (TID) propagation and excitation caused by the presence of large subauroral polarization stream flow channels. Simultaneous large-and medium-scale TIDs evolved during the event in a broad subauroral and midlatitude area near dusk. Similar concurrent TIDs occurred near dawn sectors as well during a period of sustained southward Bz. Medium-scale TIDs at subauroral and midlatitudes had wave fronts aligned northwest-southeast near dusk, and northeast-southwest near dawn. These wave fronts were highly correlated with the direction of storm time large zonal plasma drift enhancements at these latitudes. At high latitudes, unexpected, predominant, and persistent storm time TIDs were identified with 2000+ km zonal wave fronts and 15% total electron content perturbation amplitudes, moving in transpolar propagation pathways from the dayside into the nightside. This propagation direction in the polar region was opposite to the normal assumption that TIDs originated in the nightside auroral region. Results suggest that significant dayside sources, such as cusp regions, can be efficient in generating transpolar TIDs during geospace storm intervals.Plain Language Summary This paper reports several new findings on the traveling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs) excited during geospace storms in 7-8 September 2017. Storm time TIDs provide pathway for momentum and energy dispersion from the solar wind-magnetosphere system to various components of the global ionosphere and thermosphere. Storm time large-scale TIDs (LSTIDs) have been identified by many studies as being initiated generally in the auroral zone where significant heating is injected, with subsequent propagation away from the source: equatorward into lower latitudes and poleward into high latitudes. Our study indicates that, during equatorward propagation, LSTIDs can encounter strong dynamic forcing at subauroral latitudes in the zonal direction. This westward velocity forcing is provided by a SAPS (subauroral polarization stream) channel and furthermore appears to be associated with the developing of medium-scale TIDs (MSTIDs). Thus, this paper provides the first causal link between these TIDs and SAPS flow channels. Concurrent LSTIDs and MSTIDs existed during the September storm in not only near dusk but also dawn sectors. In the polar cap region, conventionally anticipated poleward propagation away from the auroral zone was unexpectedly weak. In contrast, an opposite sense of transpolar propagation from the dayside into the nightside (i.e., eq...
Abstract. We present a statistical framework for estimating global navigation satellite system (GNSS) non-ionospheric differential time delay bias. The biases are estimated by examining differences of measured line integrated electron densities (TEC) that are scaled to equivalent vertical integrated densities. The spatio-temporal variability, instrumentation dependent errors, and errors due to inaccurate ionospheric altitude profile assumptions are modeled as structure functions. These structure functions determine how the TEC differences are weighted in the linear least-squares minimization procedure, which is used to produce the bias estimates. A method for automatic detection and removal of outlier measurements that do not fit into a model of receiver bias is also described. The same statistical framework can be used for a single receiver station, but it also scales to a large global network of receivers. In addition to the Global Positioning System (GPS), the method is also applicable to other dual frequency GNSS systems, such as GLONASS (Globalnaya Navigazionnaya Sputnikovaya Sistema). The use of the framework is demonstrated in practice through several examples. A specific implementation of the methods presented here are used to compute GPS receiver biases for measurements in the MIT Haystack Madrigal distributed database system. Results of the new algorithm are compared with the current MIT Haystack Observatory MAPGPS bias determination algorithm. The new method is found to produce estimates of receiver bias that have reduced day-to-day variability and more consistent coincident vertical TEC values.
We provide the first comparison of the ICON-EUV O + density profile with radio wave datasets coming from GNSS radio-occultation, ionosondes and incoherent scatter radar. The peak density and height deduced from those different observation techniques are compared. It is found that the EUV-deduced peak density is smaller than that from other techniques by 50 to 60%, while the altitude of the peak is retrieved with a slight bias of 10 to 20 km on average. These average values are found to vary between November 2019 and March 2021. Magnetic latitude and local time are not factors significantly influencing this variability. In contrast, the EUV density is closer to that deduced from radio-wave techniques in the mid latitude region, i.e. where the ionospheric crests do not play a role. The persistent very low solar activity conditions prevailing during the studied time interval challenge the EUV O + density profile retrieval technique. These values are consistent, both in magnitude and direction, with a systematic error on the order of 10% in the data or the forward model, or a combination of both. Ultimately, the EUV instrument on-board ICON provides the only known technique capable of precisely monitoring the ionospheric peak properties at daytime from a single space platform, on a global scale and at high cadence. This feature paves the way to transpose the technology to the study of the ionosphere surrounding other planets.
Van Allen Probes in situ observations are used to examine detailed subpacket structure observed in strong VLF (very low frequency) rising-tone chorus elements observed at the time of a rapid MeV electron energization in the inner magnetosphere. Analysis of the frequency gap between lower and upper chorus-band waves identifies fceEQ, the electron gyrofrequency in the equatorial wave generation region. Initial subpackets in these strong chorus rising-tone elements begin at a frequency near 1/4 fceEQ and exhibit smooth gradual frequency increase across their > 10 ms temporal duration. A second much stronger subpacket is seen at frequencies around the local value of 1/4 fce with small wave normal angle (< 10°) and steeply rising df/dt. Smooth frequency and phase variation across and between the initial subpackets support continuous phase trapping of resonant electrons and increased potential for MeV electron acceleration. The total energy gain for individual seed electrons with energies between 100 keV and 3 MeV ranges between 2 and 15%, in their nonlinear interaction with a single chorus element.
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