scholarly journals Ionospheric Irregularities and High-multiple Reflections

1964 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 480 ◽  
Author(s):  
GG Bowman

The occurrence of high� multiple reflections (10 hops and more) from the F. layer of the ionosphere at night is considered. Sunspot-cycle, annual, and diurnal variations are presented. The sunspot. cycle and annual variations are similar to those for the upper-atmosphere neutral particle density. Periodicities in occurrence of around 60 min are found. Associations are found between high-multiple trace occurrence and sunset and sunrise times at the 90 km level. Ionospheric irregularities which are present at the time of high.multiple reflections indicate that these reflec� tions are probably not due to focusing effects. Evidence is presented to support a mechanism involving the reduction of non�deviative absorption to explain these reflections. This reduction may be caused by acoustic waves propagating in the high atmosphere.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James O'Donoghue ◽  
Luke Moore ◽  
Tanapat Bhakyapaibul ◽  
Henrik Melin ◽  
Tom Stallard ◽  
...  

<p>Jupiter's upper atmosphere is significantly hotter than expected based on the amount of solar heating it receives. This temperature discrepency is known as the 'energy crisis' due to it's nearly 50-year duration and the fact it also occurs at Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. At Jupiter, magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling gives rise to intense auroral emissions and enormous energy deposition in the magnetic polar regions, so it was presumed long ago that redistribution of this energy could heat the rest of the planet. However, most global circulation models have difficulty redistributing auroral energy globally due to the strong Coriolis forces and ion drag on this rapidly rotating planet. Consequently, other possible heat sources have continued to be studied, such as heating by gravity and acoustic waves emanating from the lower atmosphere. Each global heating mechanism would imprint a unique signature on global temperature gradients, thus revealing the dominant heat source, but these gradients have not been determined due a lack of planet-wide, high-resolution data. The last global map of Jovian upper-atmospheric temperatures was produced using ground-based data taken in 1993, in which the region between 45<sup>o</sup> latitude (north & south) and the poles was represented by just 2 pixels. As a result, those maps did not (or could not) show a clear temperature gradient, and furthermore, they even showed regions of hot atmosphere near the equator, supporting the idea of an equatorial heat source, e.g. gravity and/or acoustic wave heating. Therefore observationally and from a modeling perspective, a concensus has not been reached to date. Here we report new infrared spectroscopy of Jupiter's major upper-atmospheric ion H<sub>3</sub><sup>+</sup>, with a spatial resolution of 2<sup>o</sup> longitude and latitude extending from pole to equator, capable of tracing the global temperature gradients. We find that temperatures decrease steadily from the auroral polar regions to the equator. Further, during a period of enhanced activity possibly driven by a solar wind compression, a high-temperature planetary-scale structure was observed which may be propagating from the aurora. These observations indicate that Jupiter's upper atmosphere is predominantly heated via the redistribution of auroral energy, and therefore that Coriolis forces and ion drag are observably overcome.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 120 (2) ◽  
pp. 311-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. W. Bougher ◽  
D. Pawlowski ◽  
J. M. Bell ◽  
S. Nelli ◽  
T. McDunn ◽  
...  

Science ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 205 (4401) ◽  
pp. 62-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. KEATING ◽  
F. W. TAYLOR ◽  
J. Y. NICHOLSON ◽  
E. W. HINSON

The author first inquires into the annual and diurnal variations of the barometer and thermometer, for the determination of which he takes the mean of the observations in each month made at the Apartments of the Royal Society, during the years 1827,1828, and 1829; and also that deduced from Mr. Bouvard’s observations, published in the Memoirs of the French Academy of Sciences. From the table given it would appear that the annual variations are independent of the diurnal variations. A much greater number of observations than we possess at present, made frequently and at stated times each day, are requisite before any very satisfactory conclusion can be deduced as to the influence of the moon on the fluctuations of the barometer. The author, however, has attempted the inquiry, as far as the limited range of the present records will allow, by classifying all the observed heights, corresponding to a particular age of the moon, as defined by her transit taking place within a given half hour of the day; and thence deducing mean results, which are exhibited in tables. The results afforded by the observations at Somerset House differ widely from those obtained from corresponding observations made at the Paris Observatory. According to the former, the barometer is highest at new and full moons, and lowest at the quadratures the extent of the fluctuations being 0.08 of an inch: according to the lottery the controly is the esse, and the extent is only 0.05 of an inch.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document