Abstract

AbstractThe VHF radar operating at 205 MHz frequency installed at the Cochin University of Science and Technology (CUSAT) has been configured to probe the nighttime ionospheric field‐aligned irregularities (FAIs) over the near‐equatorial site at Cochin, India during the solar minimum periods. Even though the study period includes the minimum of the 24th and 25th solar cycles, a total of 40 nighttime irregularity events were observed at F‐region heights (150–500 km). Bottom‐type and bottom‐side irregularities were observed in this period, but no large‐scale topside ones at F‐region heights. The nighttime irregularities were most commonly observed at average heights of 200–250 km, accounting for 50% of the total events, and 27.5% of the irregularities preferentially occurred after sunset between 19 and 20 LT. While long‐duration irregularity events were not prominent during this period, irregularities that lasted for less than 50 min were predominant. To check the capability of the 205 MHz VHF radar in observing FAIs, the radar observations were compared with the European Space Agency's ionospheric observation data from the Swarm B satellite. Several derived parameters from the Swarm data set such as electron density (Ne), background Ne (bNe), electron temperature (Te), rate of electron density (ROD), index of ROD (RODI), median vertical total electron content (mVTEC), absolute VTEC (aVTEC), rate of TEC (ROT), ROTI, Bubble Index, and Bubble Probability were utilized for characterizing the ionospheric irregularities. The observation from the Swarm B satellite agrees well with that obtained from the VHF radar.

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