Abstract

Abstract We have used Monte Carlo simulations of O+ velocity distributions in the high latitude F- region to improve the calculation of incoherent radar spectra in auroral ionosphere. The Monte Carlo simulation includes ionneutral, O+-O collisions (resonant charge exchange and polarization interaction) as well as O+-O+ Coulomb self-collisions. At high altitudes, atomic oxygen O and atomic oxygen ion O+ dominate the composition of the auroral ionosphere and consequently, the influence of O+-O+ Coulomb collisions becomes significant. In this study we consider the effect of O+-O+ Coulomb collisions on the incoherent radar spectra in the presence of large electric field (100 mVm-1). As altitude increases (i.e. the ion-to-neutral density ratio increases) the role of O+-O+ Coulomb self-collisions becomes significant, therefore, the one-dimensional, 1-D, O+ ion velocity distribution function becomes more Maxwellian and the features of the radar spectrum corresponding to non-Maxwellian ion velocity distribution (e.g. baby bottle and triple hump shapes) evolve to Maxwellian ion velocity distribution (single and double hump shapes). Therefore, O+-O+ Coulomb self-collisions act to isotropize the 1-D O+ velocity distribution by transferring thermal energy from the perpendicular direction to the parallel direction, however the convection electric field acts to drive the O+ ions away from equilibrium and consequently, non-Maxwellian O+ ion velocity distributions appeared. Therefore, neglecting O+-O+ Coulomb self-collisions overestimates the effect of convection electric field.

Highlights

  • 200 km, atomic oxygen O dominates the composition of the auroral ionosphere, and as a result of the Sun’s ionizing radiation, O+ ions dominate the composition of the auroral ionosphere (Salah, 1993)

  • The main idea of this paper is to study the influence of O+-O+ Coulomb collisions on the O+ velocity distributions and on the incoherent radar spectra

  • Velocity distribution function, gi, along the radar line-ofsight from the 3-dimensional Monte Carlo simulation which takes into account the effects of O+-O collisions as well as O+-O+ Coulomb collisions in the presence of large convection electric field

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Summary

Introduction

200 km, atomic oxygen O dominates the composition of the auroral ionosphere, and as a result of the Sun’s ionizing radiation, O+ ions dominate the composition of the auroral ionosphere (Salah, 1993). Barghouthi et al (1991, 1994, 2003) used a Monte Carlo simulation to find O+ velocity distribution function for more realistic collision models (polarization scattering, resonant charge exchange and Coulomb collisions).

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