Abstract

First results on the behaviour of thermospheric temperature over Kavalur (12.5°N, 78.5°E geographic; 2.8°N geomagnetic latitude) located close to the geomagnetic equator in the Indian zone are presented. The results are based on measurements of the Doppler width of O( 1D) night airglow emission at 630 nm made with a pressure-scanned Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) on 16 nights during March April 1992. The average nighttime (2130-0430 IST) thermospheric temperature is found to be consistently higher than the MSIS-86 predictions on all but one of the nights. The mean difference between the observed nightly temperatures and model values is 269 K with a standard error of 91 K. On one of the nights (9/10 April 1992, Ap = 6) the temperature is found to increase by ~250 K around 2330 IST and is accompanied by a ‘midnight collapse’ of the F-region over Ahmedabad (23°N, 72°E, dip 26.3°N). This relationship between the temperature increase at Kavalur and F-region height decrease at Ahmedabad is also seen in the average behaviour of the two parameters. The temperature enhancement at Kavalur is interpreted as the signature of the equatorial midnight temperature maximum (MTM) and the descent of the F-region over Ahmedabad as the effect of the poleward neutral winds associated with the MTM.

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