Abstract

An observational evidence of medium‐scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (MSTIDs) reaching to magnetic latitude as low as ~3.5° over the Indian sector is provided for the first time based on OI 630‐nm airglow imaging observation from a low‐latitude station, Gadanki (13.5°N, 79.2°E; 6.6° magnetic latitude), on 12 January 2016. The horizontal wavelength, horizontal phase velocity, and period of the MSTID are found to be 160 ± 6 km, 138 ± 14 m/s, and 19.5 ± 3 min, respectively. These phase fronts are observed to move toward southwest with a propagation angle of ~235° ± 1° with respect to north. In addition to the MSTID, a strong quasiperiodic southward moving wave (QPSMW) from the evening to midnight interval and a small‐scale southward moving wave structure with wavelength and periodicity different from the QPSMW are also detected on the same night. Horizontal wavelength, horizontal phase velocity, and period of the QPSMW are estimated to be 367 ± 14 km, 131 ± 18 m/s, and 46.7 ± 13 min, respectively, and those of the small‐scale southward moving wave are found to be 157 ± 4 km, 121 ± 17.8 m/s, and 21.7 ± 3.4 min, respectively. Global Positioning System‐total electron content maps suggest that the weak and asymmetric equatorial ionization anomaly helped deep ingression of the MSTID on this night. The descent of the F layer seems to have caused the dissipation of the MSTID and QPSMW closer to the dip equator on this night. Therefore, the present investigation shows that the midlatitude MSTIDs can influence the F region plasma processes even over very low latitudes under favorable background conditions.

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