Abstract

During a solar eclipse, the temporary blockage of daytime solar illumination resembles a nighttime situation up to a certain degree. This effectively modulates the lower ionosphere by reducing the ionization rate and hence electron–ion density and the VLF signal responds accordingly. This study investigates the lower ionospheric response to the Annular Solar Eclipse of December 26, 2019 (ASE19) by analyzing VLF phase modulation as observed from four different locations in India during the campaign organized by the Indian Centre for Space Physics (ICSP), Kolkata. The eclipse path crossed the four signal paths between NWC (19.8 kHz) transmitter and the receivers from time to time and produced significant deviations in the detected signal amplitudes and phases. We adopt the analysis of the phase delay mechanism to obtain the perturbed electron density fluctuations over the paths and compute changes in VLF reflection heights during the eclipse. The electron density modulation during the eclipse with an in situ theoretical chemical model using the solar obscuration at five different points over all the signal paths are also calculated and compared with the results from VLF. Both the temporal VLF responses at the receiving points and the changes in derived electron densities are found to exactly follow the obscuration profile at the point of maximum obscuration for all the paths. This article, for the first time successfully compares two distinct independent models related to lower ionosphere during a solar eclipse and demonstrates that though we lack the necessary means to directly explore the lower ionospheric dynamics, our theories are more than adequate and roughly reflect the actual scenario.

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