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Tadahiko Ogawa

Researcher at National Institute of Information and Communications Technology

Publications -  210
Citations -  7135

Tadahiko Ogawa is an academic researcher from National Institute of Information and Communications Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Airglow & Ionosphere. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 210 publications receiving 6213 citations. Previous affiliations of Tadahiko Ogawa include Kyoto University & Nagoya University.

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Mid-latitude E region field-aligned irregularities observed with the MU radar

Abstract: Fine structures E region field-aligned irregularities were observed on June 24–25, 1989, with the MU radar at Shigaraki, Japan (34.9°N, 136.1°E; geomagnetic latitude 25.0°N). The 3.2-m scale irregularities were observed with the MU radar in five main beam directions, each of which was nearly perpendicular to the geomagnetic field at 100 km altitude. Doppler spectra were obtained every 20 s with a range resolution of 600 m. Field-perpendicular echoes appeared from 2130 to 2330 LT and from 0400 to 1100 LT, times that correspond to postsunset and postsunrise period in the E region. A preliminary examination of the Doppler spectra indicates spectral widths of 50–120 m s−1 and the mean Doppler velocities are well below the ion acoustic speed. These spectral characteristics are consistent with those obtained in the equatorial and auroral electrojets, and have been attributed to the gradient drift instability. The echoes observed during the postsunset and postsunrise periods showed quite different morphologies in the time-height distribution. For this reason, they are classified into two types, ‘continuous’ and ‘quasi-periodic.’ The appearance of the ‘continuous’ echoes was mainly continuous in time and situated between 90 and 100 km altitude during the postsunrise period. The appearance of the ‘quasi-periodic’ echoes was intermittent with periods of 5–10 min and situated above 100 km altitude during the postsunset period. The quasi-periodic echoes showed phase propagation toward the radar, while the averaged mean Doppler velocity was away from the radar. By measuring the time delays in echo regions from five directions, an apparent westward motion (approximately 120 m s−1) of the irregularity regions was estimated.
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A new technique for mapping of total electron content using GPS network in Japan

TL;DR: In this paper, a least squares fitting procedure is used to remove instrumental biases inherent in the GPS satellite and receiver to construct two-dimensional maps of absolute TEC over Japan by using GPS data from more than 1000 GPS receivers.
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Geomagnetic conjugate observations of medium-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances at midlatitude using all-sky airglow imagers

TL;DR: In this article, the first time simultaneous observations of medium-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (MSTIDs) at geomagnetic conjugate points in both hemispheres, using two all-sky airglow imagers at midlatitudes, were reported.
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Statistical study of nighttime medium‐scale traveling ionospheric disturbances using midlatitude airglow images

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated statistical characteristics of the nighttime medium-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (MSTIDs) observed in 630-nm airglow images at two stations, Rikubetsu (43.5°N, 34.8°MLAT) and Shigaraki (34.9°N and 25.4°MLA), in Japan for 1998-2000 near the solar maximum period.
Journal Article

A new technique for mapping of total electron content using GPS network in Japan

TL;DR: In this article, a least squares fitting procedure is used to remove instrumental biases inherent in the GPS satellite and receiver to construct two-dimensional maps of absolute TEC over Japan by using GPS data from more than 1000 GPS receivers.