Abstract

The global configuration of the geomagnetic field shows that the maximum east‐west difference in geomagnetic declination of northern middle latitude lies in the US region (~32°), which produces the significant ionospheric east‐west coast difference in terms of total electron content first revealed by Zhang et al. (2011). For verification, it is valuable to investigate this feature over the Far East area, which also shows significant geomagnetic declination east‐west gradient but smaller (~15°) than that of the US. The current study provides evidence of the longitudinal change supporting the thermospheric zonal wind mechanism by examining the climatology of peak electron density (NmF2), electron density (Ne) of different altitudes in the Far East regions with a longitude separation of up to 40–60° based on ground ionosonde and space‐based measurements. Although the east‐west difference (Rew) over the Far East area displays a clear diurnal variation similar to the US feature, that is negativeRew(West Ne > East Ne) in the noon and positive at evening‐night, the observational results reveal more differences including: (1) The noontime negativeRewis most pronounced in April–June while in the US during February–March. Thus, for the late spring and summer period negativeRewover the Far East region is more significant than that of the US. (2) The positiveRewat night is much less evident than in the US, especially without winter enhancement. (3) The magnitude of negativeRewtends to enhance toward solar maximum while in the US showing anticorrelation with the solar activity. The altitude distribution of pronounced negative difference (300–400 km) moves upward as the solar flux increases and hence produces the different solar activity dependence at different altitude. The result in the paper is not simply a comparison corresponding to the US results but raises some new features that are worth further studying and improve our current understanding of ionospheric longitude difference at midlatitude.

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