Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radar

We present a detailed analysis of the spatial structure of the ionospheric plasma velocity in the nightside F-region ionosphere, poleward of the open-closed magnetic field line boundary (OCB), i.e. in regions magnetically connected to the turbulent solar wind. We make use of spatially distributed me...

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Main Authors: G. A. Abel, M. P. Freeman, G. Chisham, N. W. Watkins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2007-12-01
Series:Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics
Online Access:http://www.nonlin-processes-geophys.net/14/799/2007/npg-14-799-2007.pdf
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spelling doaj-64d476db83f04f9fa5539902c8f55c2e2020-11-24T23:04:43ZengCopernicus PublicationsNonlinear Processes in Geophysics1023-58091607-79462007-12-01146799809Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radarG. A. AbelM. P. FreemanG. ChishamN. W. WatkinsWe present a detailed analysis of the spatial structure of the ionospheric plasma velocity in the nightside F-region ionosphere, poleward of the open-closed magnetic field line boundary (OCB), i.e. in regions magnetically connected to the turbulent solar wind. We make use of spatially distributed measurements of the ionospheric plasma velocity made with the Halley Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) radar between 1996 and 2003. We analyze the spatial structure of the plasma velocity using structure functions and <i>P</i>(0) scaling (where <i>P</i>(0) is the value of the probability density function at 0), which provide simple methods for deriving information about the scaling, intermittency and multi-fractal nature of the fluctuations. The structure functions can also be compared to values predicted by different turbulence models. We find that the limited range of velocity that can be measured by the Halley SuperDARN radar restricts our ability to calculate structure functions. We correct for this by using conditioning (removing velocity fluctuations with magnitudes larger than 3 standard deviations from our calculations). The resultant structure functions suggest that Kraichnan-Iroshnikov versions of <i>P</i> and log-normal models of turbulence best describe the velocity structure seen in the ionosphere. http://www.nonlin-processes-geophys.net/14/799/2007/npg-14-799-2007.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G. A. Abel
M. P. Freeman
G. Chisham
N. W. Watkins
spellingShingle G. A. Abel
M. P. Freeman
G. Chisham
N. W. Watkins
Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radar
Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics
author_facet G. A. Abel
M. P. Freeman
G. Chisham
N. W. Watkins
author_sort G. A. Abel
title Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radar
title_short Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radar
title_full Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radar
title_fullStr Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radar
title_full_unstemmed Investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the Halley SuperDARN radar
title_sort investigating turbulent structure of ionospheric plasma velocity using the halley superdarn radar
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics
issn 1023-5809
1607-7946
publishDate 2007-12-01
description We present a detailed analysis of the spatial structure of the ionospheric plasma velocity in the nightside F-region ionosphere, poleward of the open-closed magnetic field line boundary (OCB), i.e. in regions magnetically connected to the turbulent solar wind. We make use of spatially distributed measurements of the ionospheric plasma velocity made with the Halley Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) radar between 1996 and 2003. We analyze the spatial structure of the plasma velocity using structure functions and <i>P</i>(0) scaling (where <i>P</i>(0) is the value of the probability density function at 0), which provide simple methods for deriving information about the scaling, intermittency and multi-fractal nature of the fluctuations. The structure functions can also be compared to values predicted by different turbulence models. We find that the limited range of velocity that can be measured by the Halley SuperDARN radar restricts our ability to calculate structure functions. We correct for this by using conditioning (removing velocity fluctuations with magnitudes larger than 3 standard deviations from our calculations). The resultant structure functions suggest that Kraichnan-Iroshnikov versions of <i>P</i> and log-normal models of turbulence best describe the velocity structure seen in the ionosphere.
url http://www.nonlin-processes-geophys.net/14/799/2007/npg-14-799-2007.pdf
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