Geophysics
The ionosphere is a shell of
electrons and electrically charged
atoms and
molecules
that surrounds the Earth, stretching from a height of about 50 km
(31 mi) to more than 1,000 km (620 mi). It owes its existence primarily
to
ultraviolet radiation from the
Sun.
The lowest part of the
Earth's atmosphere, the
troposphere extends from the surface to about 10 km (6.2 mi). Above 10 km (6.2 mi) is the
stratosphere, followed by the
mesosphere. In the stratosphere incoming solar radiation creates the
ozone layer. At heights of above 80 km (50 mi), in the
thermosphere,
the atmosphere is so thin that free electrons can exist for short
periods of time before they are captured by a nearby positive
ion. The number of these free electrons is sufficient to affect
radio propagation. This portion of the atmosphere is
ionized and contains a
plasma
which is referred to as the ionosphere. In a plasma, the negative free
electrons and the positive ions are attracted to each other by the
electrostatic force, but they are too energetic to stay fixed together
in an electrically neutral molecule.
Ultraviolet (UV),
X-Ray and shorter
wavelengths of
solar radiation are
ionizing, since
photons at these frequencies contain sufficient energy to dislodge an
electron from a neutral gas
atom or
molecule upon absorption. In this process the light electron obtains a high velocity so that the
temperature
of the created electronic gas is much higher (of the order of thousand
K) than the one of ions and neutrals. The reverse process to
ionization is
recombination,
in which a free electron is "captured" by a positive ion. Recombination
occurs spontaneously, and causes the emission of a photon carrying away
the energy produced upon recombination. As gas density increases at
lower altitudes, the recombination process prevails, since the gas
molecules and ions are closer together. The balance between these two
processes determines the quantity of ionization present.
Ionization depends primarily on the
Sun and its
activity. The amount of ionization in the ionosphere varies greatly with the amount of radiation received from the Sun. Thus there is a
diurnal (time of day) effect and a seasonal effect. The local winter
hemisphere is tipped away from the Sun, thus there is less received solar radiation. The activity of the Sun is associated with the
sunspot cycle, with more radiation occurring with more sunspots. Radiation received also varies with geographical location (polar,
auroral zones,
mid-latitudes,
and equatorial regions). There are also mechanisms that disturb the
ionosphere and decrease the ionization. There are disturbances such as
solar flares and the associated release of charged particles into the
solar wind which reaches the Earth and interacts with its
geomagnetic field.
The ionospheric layers
Ionospheric layers.
At night the F layer is the only layer of significant ionization
present, while the ionization in the E and D layers is extremely low.
During the day, the D and E layers become much more heavily ionized, as
does the F layer, which develops an additional, weaker region of
ionisation known as the F
1 layer. The F
2 layer persists by day and night and is the region mainly responsible for the refraction of radio waves.
D layer
The D layer is the innermost layer, 60 km (37 mi) to 90 km (56 mi) above the surface of the Earth. Ionization here is due to
Lyman series-alpha hydrogen radiation at a
wavelength of 121.5
nanometre (nm) ionizing
nitric oxide (NO). In addition, with high
Solar activity hard
X-rays (wavelength < 1 nm) may ionize (N₂, O₂). During the night
cosmic rays
produce a residual amount of ionization. Recombination is high in the D
layer, the net ionization effect is low, but loss of wave energy is
great due to frequent collisions of the electrons (about ten collisions
every msec). As a result high-frequency (HF)
radio waves are not reflected by the D layer but suffer loss of energy therein. This is the main reason for
absorption of HF radio waves,
particularly at 10 MHz and below, with progressively smaller absorption
as the frequency gets higher. The absorption is small at night and
greatest about midday. The layer reduces greatly after sunset; a small
part remains due to
galactic cosmic rays. A common example of the D layer in action is the disappearance of distant AM
broadcast band stations in the daytime.
During
solar proton events,
ionization can reach unusually high levels in the D-region over high
and polar latitudes. Such very rare events are known as Polar Cap
Absorption (or PCA) events, because the increased ionization
significantly enhances the absorption of radio signals passing through
the region. In fact, absorption levels can increase by many tens of dB
during intense events, which is enough to absorb most (if not all)
transpolar HF radio signal transmissions. Such events typically last
less than 24 to 48 hours.
E layer
The
E layer
is the middle layer, 90 km (56 mi) to 120 km (75 mi) above the surface
of the Earth. Ionization is due to soft X-ray (1-10 nm) and far
ultraviolet (UV) solar radiation ionization of molecular
oxygen
(O₂). Normally, at oblique incidence, this layer can only reflect radio
waves having frequencies lower than about 10 MHz and may contribute a
bit to absorption on frequencies above. However, during intense
Sporadic E events, the E
s
layer can reflect frequencies up to 50 MHz and higher. The vertical
structure of the E layer is primarily determined by the competing
effects of ionization and recombination. At night the E layer rapidly
disappears because the primary source of ionization is no longer
present.
After sunset an increase in the height of the E layer maximum
increases the range to which radio waves can travel by reflection from
the layer.
This region is also known as the
Kennelly–Heaviside layer
or simply the Heaviside layer. Its existence was predicted in 1902
independently and almost simultaneously by the American electrical
engineer
Arthur Edwin Kennelly (1861–1939) and the British physicist
Oliver Heaviside (1850–1925). However, it was not until 1924 that its existence was detected by
Edward V. Appleton and
Miles Barnett.
Es
The E
s layer (
sporadic
E-layer) is characterized by small, thin clouds of intense ionization,
which can support reflection of radio waves, rarely up to 225 MHz.
Sporadic-E events may last for just a few minutes to several hours.
Sporadic E propagation makes
radio amateurs
very excited, as propagation paths that are generally unreachable can
open up. There are multiple causes of sporadic-E that are still being
pursued by researchers. This propagation occurs most frequently during
the summer months when high signal levels may be reached. The skip
distances are generally around 1,640 km (1,020 mi). Distances for one
hop propagation can be as close as 900 km (560 mi) or up to 2,500 km
(1,600 mi).
Double-hop reception over 3,500 km (2,200 mi) is possible.
F layer
The
F layer or region, also known as the
Appleton-Barnett
layer, extends from about 200 km (120 mi) to more than 500 km (310 mi)
above the surface of Earth. It is the densest point of the ionosphere,
which implies signals penetrating this layer will escape into space. At
higher altitudes, the number of
oxygen ions decreases and lighter ions such as hydrogen and helium become dominant; this layer is the
topside ionosphere.
There, extreme ultraviolet (UV, 10–100 nm) solar radiation ionizes
atomic oxygen. The F layer consists of one layer at night, but during
the day, a deformation often forms in the profile that is labeled F₁.
The F₂ layer remains by day and night responsible for most
skywave propagation of
radio waves, facilitating
high frequency (HF, or
shortwave) radio communications over long distances.
From 1972 to 1975
NASA launched the
AEROS and AEROS B satellites to study the F region.
[2]
Ionospheric model
An
ionospheric model is a mathematical description of the
ionosphere as a function of location, altitude, day of year, phase of
the sunspot cycle and geomagnetic activity.
Geophysically, the state of
the ionospheric
plasma may be described by four parameters:
electron density, electron and ion temperature and, since several species of ions are present,
ionic composition.
Radio propagation depends uniquely on electron density.
Models are usually expressed as computer programs. The model may be
based on basic physics of the interactions of the ions and electrons
with the neutral atmosphere and sunlight, or it may be a statistical
description based on a large number of observations or a combination of
physics and observations. One of the most widely used models is the
International Reference Ionosphere (IRI)
[3] (IRI 2007), which is based on data and specifies the four parameters just mentioned. The IRI is an international project sponsored by the
Committee on Space Research (COSPAR) and the
International Union of Radio Science (URSI).
[4] The major data sources are the worldwide network of
ionosondes, the powerful
incoherent scatter radars (Jicamarca,
Arecibo,
Millstone Hill, Malvern, St. Santin), the ISIS and Alouette topside
sounders, and in situ instruments on several satellites and rockets. IRI
is updated yearly. IRI is more accurate in describing the variation of
the electron density from bottom of the ionosphere to the altitude of
maximum density than in describing the
total electron content (TEC) .Since 1999 this model is "International Standard" for the terrestrial ionosphere (standard TS16457).
Persistent anomalies to the idealized model
Ionograms allow deducing, via computation, the true shape of the different layers. Nonhomogeneous structure of the
electron/
ion-
plasma produces rough echo traces, seen predominantly at night and at higher latitudes, and during disturbed conditions.
Winter anomaly
At mid-latitudes, the F
2 layer daytime ion production is
higher in the summer, as expected, since the Sun shines more directly on
the Earth. However, there are seasonal changes in the
molecular-to-atomic ratio of the neutral atmosphere that cause the
summer ion loss rate to be even higher. The result is that the increase
in the summertime loss overwhelms the increase in summertime production,
and total F
2 ionization is actually lower in the local
summer months. This effect is known as the winter anomaly. The anomaly
is always present in the northern hemisphere, but is usually absent in
the southern hemisphere during periods of low solar activity.
Equatorial anomaly
Electric currents created in sunward ionosphere.
Within approximately ± 20 degrees of the
magnetic equator, is the
equatorial anomaly. It is the occurrence of a trough in the ionization in the F
2 layer at the equator and crests at about 17 degrees in magnetic latitude. The Earth's
magnetic field lines are horizontal at the magnetic equator. Solar heating and
tidal
oscillations in the lower ionosphere move plasma up and across the
magnetic field lines. This sets up a sheet of electric current in the E
region which, with the
horizontal
magnetic field, forces ionization up into the F layer, concentrating at
± 20 degrees from the magnetic equator. This phenomenon is known as the
equatorial fountain.
Equatorial electrojet
The worldwide solar-driven wind results in the so-called Sq (solar
quiet) current system in the E region of the Earth's ionosphere (
ionospheric dynamo region)
(100 km (62 mi) – 130 km (81 mi) altitude). Resulting from this current
is an electrostatic field directed E-W (dawn-dusk) in the equatorial
day side of the ionosphere. At the magnetic dip equator, where the
geomagnetic field is horizontal, this electric field results in an
enhanced eastward current flow within ± 3 degrees of the magnetic
equator, known as the
equatorial electrojet.
Ephemeral ionospheric perturbations
X-rays: sudden ionospheric disturbances (SID)
When the Sun is active, strong
solar flares
can occur that will hit the sunlit side of Earth with hard X-rays. The
X-rays will penetrate to the D-region, releasing electrons that will
rapidly increase absorption, causing a High Frequency (3 - 30 MHz) radio
blackout. During this time Very Low Frequency (3 – 30 kHz) signals will
be reflected by the D layer instead of the E layer, where the increased
atmospheric density will usually increase the absorption of the wave
and thus dampen it. As soon as the X-rays end, the
sudden ionospheric disturbance (SID) or radio black-out ends as the electrons in the D-region recombine rapidly and signal strengths return to normal.
Protons: polar cap absorption (PCA)
Associated with solar flares is a release of high-energy protons.
These particles can hit the Earth within 15 minutes to 2 hours of the
solar flare. The protons spiral around and down the magnetic field lines
of the Earth and penetrate into the atmosphere near the magnetic poles
increasing the ionization of the D and E layers. PCA's typically last
anywhere from about an hour to several days, with an average of around
24 to 36 hours.
Geomagnetic storms
A
geomagnetic storm is a temporary intense disturbance of the Earth's
magnetosphere.
- During a geomagnetic storm the F₂ layer will become unstable, fragment, and may even disappear completely.
- In the Northern and Southern pole regions of the Earth aurorae will be observable in the sky.
Lightning
Lightning
can cause ionospheric perturbations in the D-region in one of two ways.
The first is through VLF (Very Low Frequency) radio waves launched into
the
magnetosphere.
These so-called "whistler" mode waves can interact with radiation belt
particles and cause them to precipitate onto the ionosphere, adding
ionization to the D-region. These disturbances are called
"lightning-induced
electron precipitation" (LEP) events.
Additional ionization can also occur from direct heating/ionization
as a result of huge motions of charge in lightning strikes. These events
are called Early/Fast.
In 1925, C. T. R. Wilson proposed a mechanism by which electrical
discharge from lightning storms could propagate upwards from clouds to
the ionosphere. Around the same time, Robert Watson-Watt, working at the
Radio Research Station in Slough, UK, suggested that the ionospheric
sporadic E layer (Es) appeared to be enhanced as a result of lightning
but that more work was needed. In 2005, C. Davis and C. Johnson, working
at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire, UK, demonstrated
that the Es layer was indeed enhanced as a result of lightning activity.
Their subsequent research has focussed on the mechanism by which this
process can occur.
Applications
Radio communication
DX communication, popular among
amateur radio enthusiasts, is a term given to communication over great distances. Thanks to the property of ionized atmospheric gases to
refract high frequency (HF, or
shortwave)
radio waves, the ionosphere can be utilized to "bounce" a transmitted
signal down to ground.
Transcontinental HF-connections rely on up to 5
bounces, or
hops. Such communications played an important role during
World War II.
Karl Rawer's most sophisticated prediction method
[1] took account of several (zig-zag) paths, attenuation in the D-region and predicted the 11-year
solar cycle by a method due to
Wolfgang Gleißberg.
Mechanism of refraction
When a radio wave reaches the ionosphere, the
electric field in the wave forces the electrons in the ionosphere into
oscillation
at the same frequency as the radio wave. Some of the radio-frequency
energy is given up to this resonant oscillation. The oscillating
electrons will then either be lost to recombination or will re-radiate
the original wave energy.
Total refraction can occur when the collision
frequency of the ionosphere is less than the radio frequency, and if the
electron density in the ionosphere is great enough.
The
critical frequency is the limiting frequency at or below which a radio wave is reflected by an ionospheric layer at vertical
incidence. If the transmitted frequency is higher than the
plasma frequency
of the ionosphere, then the electrons cannot respond fast enough, and
they are not able to re-radiate the signal. It is calculated as shown
below:
where N = electron density per m
3 and f
critical is in Hz.
The Maximum Usable Frequency (MUF) is defined as the upper frequency
limit that can be used for transmission between two points at a
specified time.
where
=
angle of attack, the angle of the wave relative to the
horizon, and sin is the
sine function.
The
cutoff frequency
is the frequency below which a radio wave fails to penetrate a layer of
the ionosphere at the incidence angle required for transmission between
two specified points by refraction from the layer.
Other applications
The
open system electrodynamic tether, which uses the ionosphere, is being researched. The
space tether uses plasma contactors and the ionosphere as parts of a circuit to extract energy from the Earth's magnetic field by
electromagnetic induction.
Measurements
Overview
Scientists also are exploring the structure of the ionosphere by a
wide variety of methods, including passive observations of optical and
radio emissions generated in the ionosphere, bouncing radio waves of
different frequencies from it,
incoherent scatter radars such as the
EISCAT, Sondre Stromfjord,
Millstone Hill,
Arecibo, and
Jicamarca radars, coherent scatter radars such as the
Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) radars, and using special receivers to detect how the reflected waves have changed from the transmitted waves.
A variety of experiments, such as HAARP (
High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program),
involve high power radio transmitters to modify the properties of the
ionosphere. These investigations focus on studying the properties and
behavior of ionospheric plasma, with particular emphasis on being able
to understand and use it to enhance communications and surveillance
systems for both civilian and military purposes. HAARP was started in
1993 as a proposed twenty-year experiment, and is currently active near
Gakona, Alaska.
The SuperDARN radar project researches the high- and mid-latitudes
using coherent backscatter of radio waves in the 8 to 20 MHz range.
Coherent backscatter is similar to Bragg scattering in crystals and
involves the constructive interference of scattering from ionospheric
density irregularities. The project involves more than 11 different
countries and multiple radars in both hemispheres.
Scientists are also examining the ionosphere by the changes to radio waves, from satellites and stars, passing through it. The
Arecibo radio telescope located in
Puerto Rico, was originally intended to study Earth's ionosphere.
Ionograms
Ionograms show the virtual heights and
critical frequencies of the ionospheric layers and which are measured by an
ionosonde.
An ionosonde sweeps a range of frequencies, usually from 0.1 to 30 MHz,
transmitting at vertical incidence to the ionosphere. As the frequency
increases, each wave is refracted less by the ionization in the layer,
and so each penetrates further before it is reflected. Eventually, a
frequency is reached that enables the wave to penetrate the layer
without being reflected. For ordinary mode waves, this occurs when the
transmitted frequency just exceeds the peak plasma, or critical,
frequency of the layer. Tracings of the reflected high frequency radio
pulses are known as ionograms. Reduction rules are given in: "URSI
Handbook of Ionogram Interpretation and Reduction", edited by
William Roy Piggott and
Karl Rawer, Elsevier Amsterdam, 1961 (translations into Chinese, French, Japanese and Russian are available).
Incoherent scatter radars
Incoherent scatter
radars operate above the critical frequencies. Therefore the technique
allows to probe the ionosphere, unlike ionosondes, also above the
electron density peaks. The thermal fluctuations of the electron density
scattering the transmitted signals lack
coherence,
which gave the technique its name. Their power spectrum contains
information not only on the density, but also on the ion and electron
temperatures, ion masses and drift velocities.
Solar flux
Solar flux is a measurement of the intensity of solar radio emissions at a frequency of 2800 MHz made using a
radio telescope located in
Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory, Penticton, British Columbia, Canada.
[5]
Known also as the 10.7 cm flux (the wavelength of the radio signals at
2800 MHz), this solar radio emission has been shown to be proportional
to sunspot activity. However, the level of the Sun's ultraviolet and
X-ray emissions is primarily responsible for causing ionization in the
Earth's upper atmosphere. We now have data from the
GOES spacecraft that measures the background
X-ray flux from the Sun, a parameter more closely related to the ionization levels in the ionosphere.
- The A and K indices are a measurement of the behavior of the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field. The K index uses a scale from 0 to 9 to measure the change in the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field. A new K index is determined at the Boulder Geomagnetic Observatory 40°08′15″N 105°14′16″W.
- The geomagnetic activity levels of the Earth are measured by the fluctuation of the Earth's magnetic field in SI units called teslas (or in non-SI gauss,
especially in older literature). The Earth's magnetic field is measured
around the planet by many observatories. The data retrieved is
processed and turned into measurement indices. Daily measurements for
the entire planet are made available through an estimate of the ap index, called the planetary A-index (PAI).
Ionospheres on other planets and Titan
The
atmosphere of Titan includes an ionosphere that ranges from about 1,100 km (680 mi) to 1,300 km (810 mi) in altitude and contains carbon compounds.
[6]
Planets with ionospheres (incomplete list):
Venus,
Uranus.
History
As early as 1839, the German mathematician and physicist Carl
Friedrich Gauss postulated that an electrically conducting region of the
atmosphere could account for observed variations of Earth's magnetic
field. Sixty years later,
Guglielmo Marconi received the first trans-Atlantic radio signal on December 12, 1901, in
St. John's, Newfoundland (now in
Canada) using a 152.4 m (500 ft) kite-supported antenna for reception. The transmitting station in
Poldhu, Cornwall, used a spark-gap transmitter to produce a signal with a frequency of approximately 500
kHz and a power of 100 times more than any radio signal previously produced.
The message received was three dits, the
Morse code for the letter
S.
To reach Newfoundland the signal would have to bounce off the
ionosphere twice. Dr. Jack Belrose has contested this, however, based on
theoretical and experimental work.
[7] However, Marconi did achieve transatlantic wireless communications in
Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, one year later.
In 1902,
Oliver Heaviside proposed the existence of the
Kennelly-Heaviside layer
of the ionosphere which bears his name. Heaviside's proposal included
means by which radio signals are transmitted around the Earth's
curvature. Heaviside's proposal, coupled with Planck's law of black body
radiation, may have hampered the growth of radio astronomy for the
detection of electromagnetic waves from celestial bodies until 1932 (and
the development of high-frequency radio transceivers). Also in 1902,
Arthur Edwin Kennelly discovered some of the ionosphere's radio-electrical properties.
In 1912, the
U.S. Congress imposed the
Radio Act of 1912 on
amateur radio operators,
limiting their operations to frequencies above 1.5 MHz (wavelength 200
meters or smaller). The government thought those frequencies were
useless. This led to the discovery of HF radio propagation via the
ionosphere in 1923.
In 1926, Scottish physicist
Robert Watson-Watt introduced the term
ionosphere in a letter published only in 1969 in
Nature:
We have in quite recent years seen the universal adoption of the term
‘stratosphere’..and..the companion term ‘troposphere’... The term
‘ionosphere’, for the region in which the main characteristic is large
scale ionisation with considerable mean free paths, appears appropriate
as an addition to this series.
Edward V. Appleton was awarded a
Nobel Prize in 1947 for his confirmation in 1927 of the existence of the ionosphere.
Lloyd Berkner
first measured the height and density of the ionosphere. This permitted
the first complete theory of short-wave radio propagation.
Maurice V. Wilkes and
J. A. Ratcliffe researched the topic of radio propagation of very long radio waves in the ionosphere.
Vitaly Ginzburg has developed a theory of electromagnetic wave propagation in plasmas such as the ionosphere.
In 1962, the
Canadian satellite
Alouette 1 was launched to study the ionosphere. Following its success were
Alouette 2 in 1965 and the two
ISIS satellites in 1969 and 1971, further AEROS -A and -B in 1972 and 1975, all for measuring the ionosphere.