To elucidate the characteristics of electromagnetic conjugacy of traveling ionospheric disturbances just after the 15 January 2022 Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcanic eruption, we analyze Global Navigation Satellite System-total electron content data and ionospheric plasma velocity data obtained from the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network Hokkaido pair of radars. Further, we use thermal infrared grid data with high spatial resolution observed by the Himawari 8 satellite to identify lower atmospheric disturbances associated with surface air pressure waves propagating as a Lamb mode. After 07:30 UT on 15 January, two distinct traveling ionospheric disturbances propagating in the westward direction appeared in the Japanese sector with the same structure as those at magnetically conjugate points in the Southern Hemisphere. Corresponding to these traveling ionospheric disturbances with their large amplitude of 0.5 – 1.1 × 1016 el/m2 observed in the Southern Hemisphere, the plasma flow direction in the F region changed from southward to northward. At this time, the magnetically conjugate points in the Southern Hemisphere were located in the sunlit region at a height of 105 km. The amplitude and period of the plasma flow variation are ~ 100–110 m/s and ~ 36–38 min, respectively. From the plasma flow perturbation, a zonal electric field is estimated as ~ 2.8–3.1 mV/m. Further, there is a phase difference of ~ 10–12 min between the total electron content and plasma flow perturbations. This result suggests that the external electric field variation generates the traveling ionospheric disturbances observed in both Southern and Northern Hemispheres. The origin of the external electric field is an E-region dynamo driven by the neutral wind oscillation associated with atmospheric acoustic waves and gravity waves. Finally, the electric field propagates to the F region and magnetically conjugate ionosphere along magnetic field lines with the local Alfven speed, which is much faster than that of Lamb mode waves. From these observational facts, it can be concluded that the E-region dynamo electric field produced in the sunlit Southern Hemisphere is a main cause of the two distinct traveling ionospheric disturbances appearing over Japan before the arrival of the air pressure disturbances. Graphical Abstract
Temporal and spatial evolutions of total electron content (TEC) and electron density in the ionosphere during a geomagnetic storm that occurred on 27 and 28 September 2017 have been investigated using global TEC data obtained from many Global Navigation Satellite System stations together with the ionosonde, geomagnetic field, Jicamarca incoherent scatter and Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) radar data. Our analysis results show that a clear enhancement of the ratio of the TEC difference (rTEC) first occurs from noon to afternoon at high latitudes within 1 hr after a sudden increase and expansion of the high‐latitude convection and prompt penetration of the electric field to the equator associated with the southward excursion of the interplanetary magnetic field. Approximately 1–2 hr after the onset of the hmF2 increase in the midlatitude and low‐latitude regions associated with the high‐latitude convection enhancement, the rTEC and foF2 values begin to increase and the enhanced rTEC region expands to low latitudes within 1–2 hr. This signature suggests that the ionospheric plasmas in the F2 region move at a higher altitude due to local electric field drift, where the recombination rate is smaller, and that the electron density increases due to additional production at the lower altitude in the sunlit region. Later, another rTEC enhancement related to the equatorial ionization anomaly appears in the equatorial region approximately 1 hr after the prompt penetration of the electric field to the equator and expands to higher latitudes within 3–4 hr.
The characteristics of global electron density variations in the ionosphere during a geomagnetic storm on 7 and 8 November 2004 were investigated using total electron content (TEC) obtained from the global navigation satellite system (GNSS). The regions of enhanced TEC over North America, Europe, and Japan first appeared in the middle-latitude regions. The TEC enhancements over North America showed a rapid longitudinal expansion and reached a wide longitudinal extent during the initial and main phases of the geomagnetic storm. TEC enhancements were simultaneously observed in both North America and Japan at 05:00 UT on 8 November. Observation data from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program showed a slight enhancement of electron density at 850 km below the equatorward boundary of the middle-latitude trough (45-48°N in geomagnetic latitude) over the Pacific Ocean. This electron density variation may correspond to the TEC enhancements observed in both Japan and North America. These results imply that an enhanced TEC region existed between North America and Japan. The TEC enhancement in Japan appeared with a magnetic conjugacy in the Southern Hemisphere, indicating one of the characteristics of storm-enhanced density (SED). Moreover, TEC enhancements simultaneously appeared from Japan to central Asia at 11:00 UT on 8 November, corresponding to the early recovery phase of the geomagnetic storm. From the above results, it is suggested that SED phenomena can be simultaneously generated over a wide longitudinal width (~100°). The longitudinal extent of this SED event is 2.5-5.0 times longer than those reported by previous studies.
An observational evidence of a unique plasma depletion event was captured by an O( 1 D) 630.0 nm airglow imager on 13 June 2018 over a transition region of geomagnetic low-mid latitude, Hanle, Leh Ladakh, India (32.77°N, 78.97°E; Mlat.~24. 1°N). The observed plasma depletion structures are tilted at an angle of 13°± 2°west of the geomagnetic north and drifted toward west. Collocated Global Navigation Satellite System-Total Electron Content measurements confirm that the structures are indeed associated with TEC depletions. Simultaneous ionosonde measurements from Delhi, India (28.70°N, 77.10°E; Mlat.~20.2°N) shows spread-F signatures confirming that these structures are associated with the ionospheric irregularities. Interestingly, radar observations over the geomagnetic low-latitude station Gadanki, India (13.5°N; 79.2°E; Mlat.~6.5°N) reveal the absence of equatorial plasma bubbles on this night. Therefore, these observations strongly suggest that the observed structures in the airglow images over Hanle are associated with mid-latitude spread-F (MSF). These MSF structures are possibly affected by the shear in the zonal plasma drift that forces the field aligned plasma irregularity structures to tilt toward west. These observations, for the first time, bring out the presence of MSF structures over geomagnetic low-mid latitude transition region. It is suggested that the plasma distribution over low latitudes plays an important role in the occurrence of MSF structures over this transition region. Understanding the source and characteristics of the plasma irregularity structures over this transition region can help in understanding the spatio-temporal evolution of global L-band scintillation in a better way.Plain Language Summary Understanding the spatio-temporal distribution of the ionospheric plasma irregularities is important in the operational forecasting of L-band scintillation and therefore has important ramifications in the satellite-based communication and navigation systems. Traditionally, plasma irregularities in the low and mid-latitudes had received focused attentions in the past with very less attention has been paid over the low to mid-latitude transition region. The present investigation provides an attempt toward that direction and proposes a mechanism on the relationship between the plasma distribution over low latitudes and the occurrence of the mid-latitude plasma irregularities over the geomagnetic low-mid latitude transition region. Comprehensive investigations are further needed in the future to understand and characterize the ionospheric plasma irregularity structures over this region.
Plasma bubbles, which have a significantly sharp depletion in the plasma density, are ionospheric irregularities in the low-latitude and equatorial regions. Within the plasma bubbles, plasma density irregularities exist at different spatial scales (
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