Abstract

Abstract. This paper presents the first direct empirical evidence that mesoscale variations in ion velocities must be taken into consideration when calculating Joule heating and relating it to changes in ion temperatures and momentum transfer to the neutral gas. The data come from the first tristatic Fabry-Perot Interferometer (FPI) measurements of the neutral atmosphere co-located with tristatic measurements of the ionosphere made by the European Incoherent Scatter (EISCAT) radar which were carried out during the nights of 27-28 February 2003 and 28 February until 1 March 2003. Tristatic measurements mean that there are no assumptions of uniform wind fields and ion drifts, nor zero vertical winds. The independent, tristatic, thermospheric measurements presented here should provide unambiguous vector wind information, and hence reduce the need to supplement observations with information obtained from models of the neutral atmosphere, or with estimates of neutral parameters derived from ionospheric measurements. These new data can also test the assumptions used in models and in ion-neutral interactions. The FPIs are located close to the 3 radars of the EISCAT configuration in northern Scandinavia, which is a region well covered by a network of complementary instruments. These provide a larger scale context within which to interpret our observations of mesoscale variations on the scales of tens of kilometres spatially and minutes temporally. Initial studies indicate that the thermosphere is more dynamic and responsive to ionospheric forcing than expected. Calculations using the tristatic volume measurements show that the magnitude of the neutral wind dynamo contribution was on average 29% of Joule heating during the first night of observation. At times it either enhanced or reduced the effective electric field by up to several tens of percent. The tristatic experiment also presents the first validation of absolute temperature measurements from a common volume observed by independently calibrated FPIs. Comparison of EISCAT ion temperatures at an altitude of 240km with FPI neutral temperatures show that Ti was around 200K below Tn for nearly 3h on the first night during a period of strong geomagnetic activity. This is inconsistent with energy transfer. Comparison with FPI temperatures from surrounding regions indicate that it could not be accounted for by height variations. Indeed, these first results seem to indicate that the 630-nm emission did not stray too far from 240km. There were also apparent drops in Te at the same time as the anomalous Ti values which are energetically implausible. Incorrect assumptions of composition or non-Maxwellian spectra are likely to be the problem.

Highlights

  • This is a unique experiment where a common volume is observed by the European Incoherent Scatter (EISCAT) radar and 3 Fabry-Perot Interferometer (FPI) to permit independent and tristatic measurements of the ionosphere and thermosphere, respectively

  • Ionosphere (Auroral ionosphere; Electric fields and currents; Ionosphere-atmosphere interactions). This is a unique experiment where a common volume is observed by the EISCAT radar and 3 FPIs to permit independent and tristatic measurements of the ionosphere and thermosphere, respectively

  • The first true common volume observations were made by the Dynamics Explorer 2 spacecraft, which carried an FPI and spectrometer instrument to measure the neutral component, together with an ion drift

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Summary

Introduction

This is a unique experiment where a common volume is observed by the EISCAT radar and 3 FPIs to permit independent and tristatic measurements of the ionosphere and thermosphere, respectively. At present the mainland EISCAT radar is the only radar in the world that makes true tristatic observations of the ionosphere This is achieved using a transmitter/receiver at Tromsø and receivers at Kiruna and Sodankyla. Conde et al, 2001; Aruliah and Griffin, 2001; Aruliah et al, 2004) and in particular with connection to gravity waves (Innis and Conde, 2002) This is important since the neutral winds and temperatures appear in several fundamental equations for ion-neutral dynamics and energetics. Even empirical models can only substitute for generic climatology studies

The tristatic experiment
Variability of thermospheric winds
Tristatic neutral temperatures and anomalous ion temperatures
Findings
Variation of the 630-nm peak emission altitude
Full Text
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