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Early morning irregularities detected with spaceborne GPS measurements in the topside ionosphere: A multisatellite case study

We present observations of the equatorial plasma bubbles (EPB) in the topside ionosphere at early morning hours (05–08 LT) in the recovery phase of the 18–19 February 2014 geomagnetic storm. This rare type of irregularities was detected in the Pacific sector using GPS measurements on board several l...

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Published in:Journal of geophysical research. Space physics 2015-10, Vol.120 (10), p.8817-8834
Main Authors: Zakharenkova, Irina, Astafyeva, Elvira, Cherniak, Iurii
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Astafyeva, Elvira
Cherniak, Iurii
description We present observations of the equatorial plasma bubbles (EPB) in the topside ionosphere at early morning hours (05–08 LT) in the recovery phase of the 18–19 February 2014 geomagnetic storm. This rare type of irregularities was detected in the Pacific sector using GPS measurements on board several low‐Earth‐orbit (LEO) satellites. We use a multisatellite constellation consisted of the three Swarm and one TerraSAR‐X satellites, that on 19 February flew in the same region and at similar altitudes ~500 km. The EPB occurrence in the LEO GPS data was observed for several consecutive orbits from ~11 UT to 16–17 UT on 19 February 2014, which suggests the following: (1) rather long duration (hours) of favorable conditions for EPB generation, (2) formation and evolution of EPB over wide longitude range of the Pacific Ocean, and (3) possible movement of the EPB region in the westward direction (with dawn). Registration of the early morning EPB in LEO GPS data was supported by concurrent in situ (Swarm and DMSP (Defense Meteorological Satellite Program)) and ground‐based (ionosonde and GPS) measurements. LEO‐based GPS technique is found to be essential and promising data source to study the topside EPB over regions with lack of the ground‐based facilities. In addition, we use the Prompt Penetration Model and the Thermosphere‐Ionosphere Electrodynamics Global Circulation Model (TIE‐GCM) to identify the possible mechanisms responsible for the observed phenomenon. The model simulation results indicate the occurrence of the zone with the enhanced vertical plasma drift (~40–45 m/s) owing to the disturbance dynamo action in the predawn/dawn sector during 09–17 UT. Key Points A new technique to detect topside EPB was applied to Swarm and TSX GPS data Morning EPB were seen over the Pacific Ocean during 6–8 h at storm recovery phase TIE‐GCM shows enhanced vertical drifts near dawn due to disturbance dynamo
doi_str_mv 10.1002/2015JA021447
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Space physics</title><description>We present observations of the equatorial plasma bubbles (EPB) in the topside ionosphere at early morning hours (05–08 LT) in the recovery phase of the 18–19 February 2014 geomagnetic storm. This rare type of irregularities was detected in the Pacific sector using GPS measurements on board several low‐Earth‐orbit (LEO) satellites. We use a multisatellite constellation consisted of the three Swarm and one TerraSAR‐X satellites, that on 19 February flew in the same region and at similar altitudes ~500 km. The EPB occurrence in the LEO GPS data was observed for several consecutive orbits from ~11 UT to 16–17 UT on 19 February 2014, which suggests the following: (1) rather long duration (hours) of favorable conditions for EPB generation, (2) formation and evolution of EPB over wide longitude range of the Pacific Ocean, and (3) possible movement of the EPB region in the westward direction (with dawn). 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LEO‐based GPS technique is found to be essential and promising data source to study the topside EPB over regions with lack of the ground‐based facilities. In addition, we use the Prompt Penetration Model and the Thermosphere‐Ionosphere Electrodynamics Global Circulation Model (TIE‐GCM) to identify the possible mechanisms responsible for the observed phenomenon. The model simulation results indicate the occurrence of the zone with the enhanced vertical plasma drift (~40–45 m/s) owing to the disturbance dynamo action in the predawn/dawn sector during 09–17 UT. 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subjects Disturbances
DMSP satellites
Earth Sciences
Geophysics
Global Positioning System
Global positioning systems
GPS
Ionosphere
Irregularities
LEO GPS
Meteorological satellites
Morning
Pacific Ocean
Physics
ROTI
Satellite navigation systems
Sciences of the Universe
Space Physics
Swarm
TIE‐GCM
topside ionospheric irregularities
title Early morning irregularities detected with spaceborne GPS measurements in the topside ionosphere: A multisatellite case study
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