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Large‐Scale Comparison of Polar Cap Ionospheric Velocities Measured by RISR‐C, RISR‐N, and SuperDARN
Author(s) -
Gillies R. G.,
Perry G. W.,
Koustov A. V.,
Varney R. H.,
Reimer A. S.,
Spanswick E.,
St.Maurice J.P.,
Donovan E.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
radio science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.371
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1944-799X
pISSN - 0048-6604
DOI - 10.1029/2017rs006435
Subject(s) - ionosphere , radar , geology , daytime , geodesy , polar , range (aeronautics) , remote sensing , atmospheric sciences , geophysics , physics , computer science , telecommunications , astronomy , materials science , composite material
The combined fields of view of the two Resolute Bay Incoherent Scatter Radars (RISR‐Canada and RISR‐North) significantly overlap the field of view of the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) radar located in Rankin Inlet. These radars measure ionospheric flow velocities in the polar cap region. Velocity data from the first multiple‐day combined operations of the two RISR radars and Rankin Inlet have been compared. Direct comparisons between line‐of‐sight measurements by both types of radars have been performed. These comparisons included data from 40 days of radar operations and used velocity data from 35 SuperDARN range gates (spanning 1,575 km). Overall, 5.2 × 10 5 comparison sets were analyzed. In particular during the daytime, signatures of groundscatter in the SuperDARN data often existed at most of the ranges considered in this comparison. This groundscatter could be partially removed from the comparison by only considering SuperDARN data points that had ionospheric velocity measurements in surrounding range cells. It was found that after removing groundscatter contamination at medium SuperDARN ranges (range gates 18–45), velocities measured by the two radar systems agreed when the high‐frequency results were adjusted to account for the refractive index effect. In regions dominated by groundscatter and E region scatter, lower SuperDARN velocities were measured and the overall comparison with the F region RISR velocities was poor.