4.0 Article

Variations of electron density and temperature in ionosphere based on the DEMETER ISL data

Journal

EARTHQUAKE SCIENCE
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 349-355

Publisher

SEISMOLOGICAL SOC CHINA & INST GEOPHYSICS, CHINA EARTHQUAKE ADMIN
DOI: 10.1007/s11589-010-0732-8

Keywords

seasonal variation; annual variation; spatial distribution; N-e; T-e; DEMETER satellite

Funding

  1. National Key Technology Research and Development Program [2008BAC35B02]

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Observations of the Langmuir Probe Instrument (ISL, Instrument Sonde de Langmuir) onboard the DEMETER satellite during four years from 2006 to 2009 were used to analyze the tempo-spatial variations of electron density (Ne) and temperature (T-e) in the ionosphere. Twenty four research bins with each covering an area with 10 degrees in longitude and 2 degrees in latitude were selected to study the spatial distributions of N-e and T-e. The results indicate that both N-e and T-e have strong annual variations in the topside ionosphere at 660 km altitude. The semiannual anomaly and equinoctial asymmetry which are usually well known as the features of F-layer also exist in the topside ionosphere at low-and mid-latitudes. The yearly variation of N-e is opposite to the peak electron density of the F2-layer (NmF2) at higher latitudes in daytime and both are similar in nighttime. Also the yearly variations of T-e at low-latitude are contrary to that at 600 km in daytime and similar in nighttime. An interesting feature of nighttime T-e at low-latitude is an obvious annual variation in the northern hemisphere and semiannual variation in the southern hemisphere. The yearly variations of T-e in daytime have negative and positive correlation with N-e at mid-and high-latitudes, respectively. Both N-e and T-e in the neighborhood bins at the same latitude have a high correlation. In ionospheric events analyzing, this information may help to understand the characteristics of the variation and to distinguish the reliable abnormality from the normal background map.

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