Abstract

Ariel 3 and 4 satellite observations of the GBR 16 kHz and NAA 17.8 kHz transmissions above the ionosphere in the conjugate hemisphere show that their wave-fields generally show a rapid reduction in signal strength for geomagnetic latitudes greater than 55°–60°. Sometimes, however, the signal strength has been observed to be high in the invariant latitude range > 60°. At certain times during these observations, the signal showed clear evidence of amplification, whilst at other times the pattern of signal strength was displaced to higher latitude with the signal strength integrated over latitude being unchanged from that normally observed. It is shown that the plasmapause can guide both the NAA and GBR signals but that the efficiency of this guiding depends on the plasmapause position. The important condition is found that the plasmapause must be situated sufficiently equatorwards that half the equatorial electron gyrofrequency at the plasmapause position is greater than (or approximately equal to) the transmitter signal frequency. Ray-tracing calculations in a realistic magnetosphere model indicate that for the 16 kHz GBR signal, the efficiency of guiding falls off for L pp , (the L-value of the plasmapause) > 3.0 and guiding effectively ceases for L pp > 3.5. Guidance by the plasmapause results in a wave-field at higher latitude than for non-guided propagation. This will only occur when, following geomagnetic storms, the plasmapause position is at a sufficiently low L-value. This is in agreement with the experimental observations of anomalously high latitude signal reception following strong magnetic storms ( K p ≥ 4+).

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