plasma line
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chrystal Moser ◽  
James LaBelle ◽  
Iver H. Cairns

Abstract. The High-Bandwidth Auroral Rocket (HIBAR) was launched from Poker Flat, Alaska on January 28, 2003 at 07:50 UT towards an apogee of 382 km in the night-side aurora. The flight was unique in having three high-frequency (HF) receivers using multiple antennas parallel and perpendicular to the ambient magnetic field, as well as very low frequency (VLF) receivers using antennas perpendicular to the magnetic field. These receivers observed five short-lived Langmuir wave bursts lasting from 0.1–0.2 s, consisting of a thin plasma line with frequencies in the range of 2470–2610 kHz that had an associated diffuse feature occurring 5–10 kHz above the plasma line. Both of these waves occurred slightly above the local plasma frequency with amplitudes between 1–100 μV/m. The ratio of the parallel to perpendicular components of the plasma line and diffuse feature were used to determine the angle of propagation of these waves with respect to the background magnetic field. These angles were found to be comparable to the theoretical Z-infinity angle that these waves would resonate at. The VLF receiver detected auroral hiss throughout the flight at 5–10 kHz, a frequency matching the difference between the plasma line and the diffuse feature. A dispersion solver, partially informed with measured electron distributions, and associated frequency- and wavevector-matching conditions were employed to determine if the diffuse features could be generated by a nonlinear wave-wave interaction of the plasma line with the lower frequency auroral hiss waves/lower-hybrid waves. The results show that this interpretation is plausible.


Universe ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 274
Author(s):  
Zeyun Li ◽  
Qingfeng Li ◽  
Hanxian Fang ◽  
Hongwei Gong

We present the observations of the artificial ionospheric modification experiment of EISCAT on 18 October 2012 in Tromsø, Norway. When the pump of alternating O mode and X mode is switched on, the UHF radar observation shows some strong enhancements in electron density, ion lines and plasma lines. Based on some existing theories, we find the following: First, during the experiment, the frequency of plasma line (), ion line () and pump () matches = − 3 and = − 5 occasionally demonstrated that the cascade process occurred. Second, through quantitative calculation, we found that the O-mode component mixed in X-mode wave satisfies the thresholds of the parametric decay instability and the oscillation two-stream instability, from which we infer that the HF-induced plasma lines (HFPLs) and HF-enhanced ion lines (HFILs) observed in X-mode pulse could have been caused by the O-mode component mixed in X-mode wave. Third, the UHF radar observation shows some apparent enhancements over a wide altitude range (from approximately the reflection altitude to ~670 km) in electron density during X-mode pulse, which also does not, in fact, correspond to a true increase in electron density, but due to the enhancement in ion line or the enhancement in radar backscatter induced by some unknown mechanism.


Author(s):  
D. Semkat ◽  
H. Fehske ◽  
H. Stolz

AbstractWe investigate quantum many-body effects on Rydberg excitons in cuprous oxide induced by the surrounding electron-hole plasma. Line shifts and widths are calculated by full diagonalisation of the plasma Hamiltonian and compared to results in first order perturbation theory, and the oscillator strength of the exciton lines is analysed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 126 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
William J. Longley ◽  
Juha Vierinen ◽  
Michael P. Sulzer ◽  
Roger H. Varney ◽  
Philip J. Erickson ◽  
...  
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2020 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Martínez-Ledesma ◽  
Francisco Jaramillo Montoya

Abstract Simultaneously estimating plasma parameters of the ionosphere presents a problem for the incoherent scatter radar (ISR) technique at altitudes between ~ 130 and ~ 300 km. Different mixtures of ion concentrations and temperatures generate almost identical backscattered signals, hindering the discrimination between plasma parameters. This temperature–ion composition ambiguity problem is commonly solved either by using models of ionospheric parameters or by the addition of parameters determined from the plasma line of the radar. Some studies demonstrated that it is also possible to unambiguously estimate ISR signals with very low signal fluctuation using the most frequently used non-linear least squares (NLLS) fitting algorithm. In a previous study, the unambiguous estimation performance of the particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithm was evaluated, outperforming the standard NLLS algorithm fitting signals with very small fluctuations. Nevertheless, this study considered a confined search range of plasma parameters assuming a priori knowledge of the behavior of the ion composition and signals with very large SNR obtained at the Arecibo Observatory, which are not commonly feasible at other ISR facilities worldwide. In the present study, we conduct Monte Carlo simulations of PSO fittings to evaluate the performance of this algorithm at different signal fluctuation levels. We also determine the effect of adding different combinations of parameters known from the plasma line, different search ranges, and internal configurations of PSO parameters. Results suggest that similar performances are obtained by PSO and NLLS algorithms, but PSO has much larger computational requirements. The PSO algorithm obtains much lower convergences when no a priori information is provided. The a priori knowledge of Ne and $${T}_{e}/{T}_{i}$$ T e / T i parameters shows better convergences and “correct” estimations. Also, results demonstrate that the addition of $${N}_{e}$$ N e and $${T}_{e}$$ T e parameters provides the most information to solve the ambiguity problem using both optimization algorithms.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Wu ◽  
Jian Wu ◽  
Michael T. Rietveld ◽  
Ingemar Haggstrom ◽  
Haisheng Zhao ◽  
...  

Abstract. During an ionospheric heating campaign carried out at the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT), the ultra high frequency incoherent scatter (IS) radar observed a systematic variation in the altitude of the high-frequency enhanced plasma line (HFPL), which behaves depending on the pump frequency. Specifically, the HFPL altitude becomes lower when the pump lies above the 5th gyro-harmonic. The analysis shows that the enhanced electron temperature plays a decisive role in the descent in the HFPL altitude. That is, on the traveling path of the enhanced Langmuir wave, the enhanced electron temperature can only be matched by the low electron density at a lower altitude so that the Bragg condition can be satisfied, as expected from the dispersion relation of Langmuir wave.


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