VIPIR and 50 MHz radar studies of gravity wave signatures in 150‐km echoes observed at Jicamarca
Abstract
Range‐time‐intensity (RTI) plots of 50 MHz radar backscatter detected at Jicamarca from the 150‐km region of the equatorial ionosphere exhibit necklace‐shaped multilayered structures first reported by Kudeki and Fawcett (1993, https://doi.org/10.1029/93GL01256). The backscatter layers also exhibit quasi‐periodic intensity fluctuations with periods of about 5–15 min and are separated from adjacent layers by thin and undulating regions of no detectible power returns. A study of the fluctuating backscatter layers and undulating gap regions will be presented using VIPIR ionosonde data taken at the Jicamarca Radio Observatory simultaneously with high‐resolution 50‐MHz radar backscatter data. VIPIR virtual reflection height variations in time are noted to match the RTI gap‐region undulations very closely at selected VIPIR frequencies (or, equivalently, electron densities at reflection heights). This matching enables assigning “true heights” to VIPIR virtual height contour maps, and a joint study of the contour maps with the 50‐MHz radar RTI maps strongly suggests that correlated fluctuations and undulations observed in VIPIR and 50‐MHz radar data are indicative of gravity wave‐induced variations in the 150‐km region ionosphere. Accordingly, a complete explanation of the 150‐km echo phenomenon will need to include gravity wave coupling and forcing effects in the enhancement and suppression processes that can account for the observed fluctuations and gap‐region features of necklace‐shaped 150‐km echo maps.
Description
Date
2020-08
Keywords
Equatorial ionosphere , 150‐km echoes , Radar scattering , Ionospheric sounding , Gravity waves
Citation
Reyes, P. M., Kudeki, E., Lehmacher, G. A., Chau, J. L., & Milla, M. A. (2020). VIPIR and 50 MHz radar studies of gravity wave signatures in 150‐km echoes observed at Jicamarca. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 125 (8). https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JA027535
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Publisher
American Geophysical Union