Plasma Drift Rates During and Preceding Equatorial Spread F Inferred by the HF Doppler Technique
Abstract
The quiet time afternoon and evening equatorial and low-latitude ionosphere is characterized by increasing vertical drift and sharpening plasma density gradient in the lower F region. This combination of effects leads to the plasma instability cascade known imprecisely as "equatorial spread F." In this work, we utilize a simple transequatorial HF Doppler observation to infer the vertical and horizontal plasma drifts preceding and during spread-F conditions. The data exhibit three behavior regimes indicative of three different processes: The first is a slow vertical drift that may be due to either increasing vertical plasma drifts or recombination of the bottomside. The second is an explosive spread Doppler signature (indicating relative velocities of 600 m/s or more) that is associated with the initiation of the spread-F depletions. Finally, the third is a structure that represents a changing HF propagation channel as radio rays propagate through the regions of depleted-but still unstable-plasma. Observations of the March 2016 Pacific total solar eclipse will also be included as a test case for the effects of vertical drifts versus recombination.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFMSA12A..09M
- Keywords:
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- 2415 Equatorial ionosphere;
- IONOSPHERE;
- 2435 Ionospheric disturbances;
- IONOSPHERE;
- 2437 Ionospheric dynamics;
- IONOSPHERE;
- 2443 Midlatitude ionosphere;
- IONOSPHERE