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Journal ArticleDOI

The equatorial ionospheric anomaly in electron content from solar minimum to solar maximum for South East Asia

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors used the median hourly electron content-latitude profiles obtained in South East Asia under solar minimum and maximum conditions to establish seasonal and solar differences in the diurnal variations of the ionospheric equatorial anomaly (EIA).
Abstract
. Median hourly, electron content-latitude profiles obtained in South East Asia under solar minimum and maximum conditions have been used to establish seasonal and solar differences in the diurnal variations of the ionospheric equatorial anomaly (EIA). The seasonal changes have been mainly accounted for from a consideration of the daytime meridional wind, affecting the EIA diffusion of ionization from the magnetic equator down the magnetic field lines towards the crests. Depending upon the seasonal location of the subsolar point in relation to the magnetic equator diffusion rates were increased or decreased. This led to crest asymmetries at the solstices with (1) the winter crest enhanced in the morning (increased diffusion rate) and (2) the same crest decaying most rapidly in the late afternoon (faster recombination rate at lower ionospheric levels). Such asymmetries were also observed, to a lesser extent, at the equinoxes since the magnetic equator (located at about 9°N lat) does not coincide with the geographic equator. Another factor affecting the magnitude of a particular electron content crest was the proximity of the subsolar point, since this increased the local ionization production rate. Enhancements of the EIA took place around sunset, mainly during the equinoxes and more frequently at solar maximum, and also there was evidence of apparent EIA crest resurgences around 0300 LST for all seasons at solar maximum. The latter are thought to be associated with the commonly observed, post-midnight, ionization enhancements at midlatitudes, ionization being transported to low latitudes by an equatorward wind. The ratio increases in crest peak electron contents from solar minimum to maximum of 2.7 at the equinoxes, 2.0 at the northern summer solstice and 1.7 at northern winter solstice can be explained, only partly, by increases in the magnitude of the eastward electric field E overhead the magnetic equator affecting the [E×B] vertical drifts. The most important factor is the corresponding increase in ionization production rate due to the increase in solar radiation flux. The EIA crest asymmetries observed at solar maximum were less significant, and this is probably due to the corresponding increase in ionization densities leading to an increase of the retarding effect of ion-drag on the daytime meridional winds.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Equatorial plasma fountain and its effects-possibility of an additional layer

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the Sheffield University plasmasphere-ionosphere model for the ionosphere above Jicamarca under magnetically quiet equinoctial conditions at medium solar activity.
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Equatorial plasma fountain and its effects over three locations: Evidence for an additional layer, the F 3 layer

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Sheffield University plasmasphere-ionosphere model under magnetically quiet equinoctial conditions at high solar activity to study the equatorial plasma fountain and equatorial anomaly in the ionospheres over Jicamarca (77°W), Trivandrum ( 77°E), and Fortaleza (38°W).
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Latitudinal extension of low-latitude scintillations measured with a network of GPS receivers

TL;DR: In this article, a case-study event was presented in which the latitudinal extension of GPS scintillations, the maximum latitude of TEC depletion detections, and the altitude extension of radar plumes were correlated with the location and extension of the equatorial anomaly.
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Estimating the daytime Equatorial Ionization Anomaly strength from electric field proxies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the correlation between the zonal electric field and the EIA in the Peruvian sector and compared the results with correlations of the EEJ versus EIA strength.
Journal ArticleDOI

FORMOSAT-3/COSMIC observations of seasonal and longitudinal variations of equatorial ionization anomaly and its interhemispheric asymmetry during the solar minimum period

TL;DR: In this paper, the seasonal and longitudinal variations of equatorial ionization anomaly (EIA) and the temporal variation in the hemispheric asymmetry of EIA during the low solar activity period from November 2006 to October 2007 were investigated.