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Short‐term magnetic field alignment variations of equatorial ionospheric irregularities
Author(s) -
Johnson Allen L.
Publication year - 1988
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/rs023i003p00331
Subject(s) - fading , geodesy , scintillation , ionosphere , earth's magnetic field , geology , tilt (camera) , magnetic field , term (time) , f region , physics , satellite , remote sensing , geophysics , optics , geometry , mathematics , astronomy , statistics , detector , decoding methods , quantum mechanics
The ionospheric irregularities that cause equatorial scintillation are elongated along the north‐south magnetic field lines. During a 1981 field campaign at Ascension Island, 250‐MHz receivers were spaced from 300 m to 1.6 km along the field lines, and the signals received from the Marisat satellite were cross correlated. Data collected during eight nights of fading showed a linear relationship between fading rate and cross correlation. The alignment of the antennas was adjusted to give a zero time lag between the widely spaced receivers with a measurement accuracy of 0.03 s. Since the average irregularity velocity was 125 m/s, this time accuracy translated to an angular measurement accuracy of 0.1°. During a 4‐hour period of nightly fading, occasional differences in time of arrival were noted that corresponded to a tilt in the north‐south alignment of ±1°. Data from several nights of fading were analyzed, and each night exhibited the same variance in the north‐south irregularity alignment. It is postulated that the shift in the measured peak correlation may have been caused by patches of irregularities at different altitudes where the magnetic field lines have a slightly different direction.

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