High-latitude ionospheric perturbations and gravity waves: 2. Numerical simulations

We have calculated ionospheric perturbations produced by gravity waves at high latitudes. It is shown that gravity waves with reasonable parameters can produce strong ionospheric perturbations in the altitude range of 200–400 km. The ionospheric perturbations become weak above 400 km due to the pres...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 1998-02, Vol.103 (A2), p.2143-2153
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Chao‐Song, Andre, Dieter A., Sofko, George J.
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creator Huang, Chao‐Song
Andre, Dieter A.
Sofko, George J.
description We have calculated ionospheric perturbations produced by gravity waves at high latitudes. It is shown that gravity waves with reasonable parameters can produce strong ionospheric perturbations in the altitude range of 200–400 km. The ionospheric perturbations become weak above 400 km due to the presence of plasma diffusion. If the horizontal perturbation velocity of the neutrals due to gravity waves increases from 20 m/s at 200‐km altitude to 30 m/s at 350‐km altitude, the amplitude of the relative ionospheric density perturbations is about 30% below 350 km. A ray tracing program has been used to trace the ionospheric ray paths of HF rays passing through the strong periodic density perturbations resulting from the gravity waves. The paths of HF rays manifest some new and important features. Rays with small elevation angles are focused and reflected by the density undulations in the bottomside F region. These rays can undergo ground scattering at the so‐called “one‐hop” range. They can also undergo ground reflection and, as such, usually are assumed to be the rays which access scattering regions at larger range by the one‐and‐a‐half hop propagation mode. In this mode the ratio of the ranges of the high‐latitude scatter and the ground scatter is about 3/2. However, there is a significant range of larger elevation angles for which the rays may be “trapped” in the highly perturbed F region. These Pedersen rays can travel large distances before being scattered and the 3/2 range ratio no longer applies. The ray tracing results presented in this paper provide a reasonable explanation of simultaneous ground scatter and auroral scatter observations made by the Saskatoon SuperDARN HF radar.
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A ray tracing program has been used to trace the ionospheric ray paths of HF rays passing through the strong periodic density perturbations resulting from the gravity waves. The paths of HF rays manifest some new and important features. Rays with small elevation angles are focused and reflected by the density undulations in the bottomside F region. These rays can undergo ground scattering at the so‐called “one‐hop” range. They can also undergo ground reflection and, as such, usually are assumed to be the rays which access scattering regions at larger range by the one‐and‐a‐half hop propagation mode. In this mode the ratio of the ranges of the high‐latitude scatter and the ground scatter is about 3/2. However, there is a significant range of larger elevation angles for which the rays may be “trapped” in the highly perturbed F region. These Pedersen rays can travel large distances before being scattered and the 3/2 range ratio no longer applies. 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A ray tracing program has been used to trace the ionospheric ray paths of HF rays passing through the strong periodic density perturbations resulting from the gravity waves. The paths of HF rays manifest some new and important features. Rays with small elevation angles are focused and reflected by the density undulations in the bottomside F region. These rays can undergo ground scattering at the so‐called “one‐hop” range. They can also undergo ground reflection and, as such, usually are assumed to be the rays which access scattering regions at larger range by the one‐and‐a‐half hop propagation mode. In this mode the ratio of the ranges of the high‐latitude scatter and the ground scatter is about 3/2. However, there is a significant range of larger elevation angles for which the rays may be “trapped” in the highly perturbed F region. These Pedersen rays can travel large distances before being scattered and the 3/2 range ratio no longer applies. 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source Wiley Journals; Wiley-Blackwell AGU Digital Library; Wiley Online Library (Open Access Collection); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Earth, ocean, space
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Ionospheric disturbances
Physics of the ionosphere
Wave propagation
title High-latitude ionospheric perturbations and gravity waves: 2. Numerical simulations
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