Abstract

Abstract. A latitudinal-distributed network of GPS receivers has been operating within Colombia, Peru and Chile with sufficient latitudinal span to measure the absolute total electron content (TEC) at both crests of the equatorial anomaly. The network also provides the latitudinal extension of GPS scintillations and TEC depletions. The GPS-based information has been supplemented with density profiles collected with the Jicamarca digisonde and JULIA power maps to investigate the background conditions of the nighttime ionosphere that prevail during the formation and the persistence of plasma depletions. This paper presents case-study events in which the latitudinal extension of GPS scintillations, the maximum latitude of TEC depletion detections, and the altitude extension of radar plumes are correlated with the location and extension of the equatorial anomaly. Then it shows the combined statistics of GPS scintillations, TEC depletions, TEC latitudinal profiles, and bottomside density profiles collected between September 2001 and June 2002. It is demonstrated that multiple sights of TEC depletions from different stations can be used to estimate the drift of the background plasma, the tilt of the plasma plumes, and in some cases even the approximate time and location of the depletion onset. This study corroborates the fact that TEC depletions and radar plumes coincide with intense levels of GPS scintillations. Bottomside radar traces do not seem to be associated with GPS scintillations. It is demonstrated that scintillations/depletions can occur when the TEC latitude profiles are symmetric, asymmetric or highly asymmetric; this is during the absence of one crest. Comparison of the location of the northern crest of the equatorial anomaly and the maximum latitude of scintillations reveals that for 90% of the days, scintillations are confined within the boundaries of the 50% decay limit of the anomaly crests. The crests of the anomaly are the regions where the most intense GPS scintillations and the deepest TEC depletions are encountered. In accord with early results, we observe that GPS scintillations/TEC depletions mainly occur when the altitude of the magnetic equator F-region is above 500km. Nevertheless, in many instances GPS scintillations and TEC depletions are observed to exist when the F-layer is well below 500km or to persist when the F-layer undergoes its typical nighttime descent. Close inspection of the TEC profiles during scintillations/depletions events that occur when the equatorial F-layer peak is below 500km altitude reveals that on these occasions the ratio of the crest-to-equator TEC is above 2, and the crests are displaced 10° or more from the magnetic equator. When the equatorial F-layer is above 500km, neither of the two requirements is needed, as the flux tube seems to be inherently unstable. We discuss these findings in terms of the Rayleigh-Taylor instability (RTI) mechanism for flux-tube integrated quantities. We advance the idea that the seeming control that the reverse fountain effect exerts on inhibiting or suppressing GPS scintillations may be related to the redistribution of the density and plasma transport from the crests of the anomaly toward the equatorial region and then to much lower altitudes, and the simultaneous decrease of the F-region altitude. These two effects originate a decrease in the crest/trough ratio and a reduction of the crests separation, making the whole flux tube more stable to the RTI. The correspondence between crest separation, altitude of the equatorial F-region, the onset of depletions, and the altitude (latitude) extension of plumes (GPS scintillations) can be used to track the fate of the density structures.

Highlights

  • Equatorial spread F (ESF) is a complex plasma phenomenon that develops almost exclusively during the nighttime hours

  • This paper presents altitude-time maps of coherent echoes collected with the JULIA radar

  • We found that GPS scintillations were more prominent near the crest, but when a single station was considered, we found no firm assurance that deeper total electron content (TEC) depletions correlate with more intense GPS scintillations

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Summary

Introduction

Equatorial spread F (ESF) is a complex plasma phenomenon that develops almost exclusively during the nighttime hours. They are placed at the latitude of the sub-ionospheric penetration point and at the times when the S4 index exceeded the noise level (0.20) The purpose of this figure is: 1) to demonstrate the close relationship between the location of scintillations and the latitudinal extension of the equatorial anomaly, and 2) to indicate the rapid response of GPS scintillations to the evolution of the TEC profiles. We show the hmF2 measured at Jicamarca as a function of two key representative parameters of the TEC profiles: the crest-to-trough TEC ratio and the latitudinal separation of the northern crest. The lower the F-region peak, the higher that the TEC ratio and the crest separation have to be for the flux tube to remain unstable to the initiation or persistence of GPS scintillations

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