JOURNAL ARTICLE

Daytime F-region irregularity triggered by rocket-induced ionospheric hole over low latitude

Abstract

Abstract Unexpected daytime F-region irregularities following the appearance of an ionospheric hole have been observed over low latitude. The irregularities developed initially above the F-region peak height (~ 360 km) with a thickness of about 30 km and an east-west extension of more than 200 km around 1057 LT and then expanded upward to 500 km altitude behaving like the equatorial spread-F (ESF) irregularities of the nighttime ionosphere. These daytime F-region irregularities cannot be explained on basis of an earlier suggestion that the F-region irregularities observed during daytime are the continuation of the irregularities initially generated on the previous night. Based on the coincidence, both in space and time, with the appearance of an ionospheric hole, which was generated after the passage of a rocket, we conclude that the daytime F-region irregularities must have been artificially generated locally through a manifestation of plasma instability triggered by the rocket exhaust-induced ionospheric hole over low latitude.

Keywords:
Daytime Ionosphere Geology Rocket (weapon) Latitude Altitude (triangle) Atmospheric sciences Low latitude F region Ionospheric sounding Geodesy Geophysics Geography Geometry

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Citation History

Topics

Ionosphere and magnetosphere dynamics
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Astronomy and Astrophysics
Earthquake Detection and Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Geophysics
GNSS positioning and interference
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Aerospace Engineering
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