Annales Geophysicae (May 2003)

Ionosphere dynamics over Europe and western Asia during magnetospheric substorms 1998–99

  • D. V. Blagoveshchensky,
  • O. A. Maltseva,
  • A. S. Rodger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-21-1141-2003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21
pp. 1141 – 1151

Abstract

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The temporal and spatial behaviour of the ionospheric parameters foF2 and h'F during isolated substorms are examined using data from ionospheric stations distributed across Europe and western Asia. The main purpose is finding the forerunners of the substorm disturbances and a possible prediction of these disturbances. During the period from March 1998 to March 1999, 41 isolated substorms with intensities I = 60 - 400 nT were identified and studied. The study separated occasions when the local magnetometers were affected by the eastward electrojet (positive substorms) from those influenced by the westward electrojet (negative substorms). The deviations of the ionospheric parameters from their monthly medians (DfoF2 and Dh'F) have been used to determine the variations through the substorm. Substorm effects occurred simultaneously (< 1 h) across the entire observatory network. For negative substorms, DfoF2-values increase > 6 h before substorm onset, To, reaching a maximum 2–3 h before To. A second maximum occurs 1–2 h after the end of the substorm. The Dh'F values 3–4 h before To have a small minimum but then increase to a maximum at To. There is a second maximum at the end of the expansion phase before dh'F drops to a minimum 2–3 h after ending the expansion phase. For positive substorms, the timing of the first maximum of the dfoF2 and dh'F values depends on the substorm length – if it is longer, the position is closer to To. The effects on the ionosphere are significant: DfoF2 and Dh'F reach 2–3 MHz (dfoF2 = 50–70% from median value) and 50–70 km (D h'F = 20–30% from median value), respectively. Regular patterns of occurrence ahead of the first substorm signature on the magnetometer offer an excellent possibility to improve short-term forecasting of radio wave propagation conditions.Key words. Ionosphere (ionospheric disturbances) – Magnetospheric physics (storms and substorms) Radio science (ionospheric physics)