Multi-Scale Structuring of the Polar Ionosphere
23AERP04_08
04/01/2023
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Understanding a radically new sensing capability for polar ionospheric science introduced by observational evidence recently provided by the electronically steerable Resolute Bay Incoherent Scatter Radar (RISR).
Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Arlington, VA
Ionospheric variability is a critical consideration for communication systems, GNSS, and space asset management. At high magnetic latitudes, the convergent magnetic field acts as a lens, focusing electromagnetic power originating from solar wind-magnetosphere interactions into a limited latitudinal range. The geometry and ensuing complex coupling processes result in extreme multi-scale time-dependent variations in the structure and composition of the ionized gases in Earth's outer atmosphere. Understanding the mechanisms and technological consequences of these interactions benefits from distributed heterogeneous time-dependent measurements of the ionosphere-thermosphere-magnetosphere system, and their application as constraints on predictive space weather models.
This research used collaborative observations by UHF incoherent scatter radar (ISR), the HF SuperDARN radar network, and wide-angle optical imagers, supported by first-principles numerical modeling, to clarify the driving mechanisms and physical consequences of these interactions. Critical new observational evidence has been provided by the electronically steerable Resolute Bay Incoherent Scatter Radar (RISR), which has introduced a radically new sensing capability to polar ionospheric science. The results of this research include both technical contributions related to the application of phased array ISR in the polar cap, and scientific contributions arising from the application of these techniques. The major published results may be summarized as follows:
Numerical simulation of densities, temperatures, and cross-field plasma flows within density cavities along auroral boundaries has revealed extreme plasma parameters creating sites of instabilities and turbulence.
These extreme frictional heating events lead to anomalous spectral characteristics in Incoherent Scatter Radar (ISR) measurements. We have developed a Zakharov simulation framework that enables extraction of useful plasma information from such distorted spectra.
Application of tomographic analysis to fine-scale auroral forms appearing at the boundaries of these turbulent flow channels enabled us to quantify the width, temporal scales, and particle energies using model based inversion techniques.
The work on this project was synergistic with AF-sponsored efforts to develop a space-based sensor network comprised of cubesats for analyzing small-scale field-aligned current systems in the aurora. This project partially supported a feasibility study carried out in collaboration with Planet Labs using their 278-element cubesat constellation.
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- Citation
- "Multi-Scale Structuring of the Polar Ionosphere," Mobility Engineering, April 1, 2023.