4.5 Article

Sporadic E morphology from GPS-CHAMP radio occultation -: art. no. A01306

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2004JA010701

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

[ 1] The scintillations of phase and amplitude in terms of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the GPS radio occultation signal are caused by thin ionization layers. These thin irregular electron density layers in the E region ionosphere are often called sporadic E (E-s). For a monthly retrieval of Es morphology we use the variances of the phase and SNR fluctuations of worldwide similar to 6000 GPS/CHAMP occultations in the E region. The E-s climatology is studied globally with the SNR and phase variances in terms of monthly zonal means, seasonal maps, and diurnal and long-term variations. The zonal mean variances reveal strong, extended E-s activities at summertime midlatitudes but weak, confined activities in wintertime high latitudes, peaking at similar to 105 km. Global maps at 105-km altitude show clear dependence of E-s activities on the geomagnetic dip angle, where the summertime midlatitude E-s occurs mostly at dip angles of 30degrees- 60degrees and the wintertime high-latitude enhancement occurs mostly at dip angles >80degrees. The midlatitude Es variances exhibit a strong semidiurnal variation with peak hours near 0800 - 1000 and 2000 local solar time, respectively. The peak hours are delayed slightly with decreasing height, suggesting influences from the semidiurnal tide. To provide more insights on the observed SNR and phase variances, we model radio wave propagation for the CHAMP observing geometry under several perturbed cases in the E region ionosphere. The model simulations indicate that the SNR variance has the maximum response to E-s perturbations at vertical wavelengths of similar to 1.2 km, whereas the phase response maximizes at similar to 2 km (for the 1-s variance analysis). The characteristic scale depends little on the truncation time used in the SNR variance analysis, but it increases with the truncation time for the phase variances. Initial studies show that reasonable global Es morphology can be produced on a monthly and seasonal basis with the CHAMP one-antenna occultations. Better results from other existing and upcoming GPS occultation missions are anticipated in future studies, and they will significantly improve our understanding of this important phenomenon.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available