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Published byChad Murphy Modified over 9 years ago
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Ionospheric HF radars Pasha Ponomarenko
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Outline Conventional radars vs ionospheric radars Collective scatter processes Aspect angle effects HF propagation features SuperDARN
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Radars RAdio Detection And Ranging Remote sensing tool based on EM wave emission and its reflection/scatter from a target Main target parameters: range – time of flight direction – antenna directivity velocity – Doppler shift
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Antenna beam echo Radar Ground signal Distance “Normal” radars target The target is usually smaller than the spatial pulse length. Doppler velocity
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Antenna beam Radar Ionosphere with irregularities Ground signal echo ~300 km Ionospheric radars Refractive index fluctuations The scattering volume is larger than the spatial pulse length.
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k λ Collective scatter theory λ/2 irregularities k λ Constructive interference (Bragg condition) Spatial array with l = λ/2
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Ionospheric turbulence Continuous spatial spectrum of irregularities ln S ln k
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Bragg scatter still works! ln S ln k k λ k λ λ/2 Constructive interference condition (Bragg condition)
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Anisotropic turbulence E and F region irregularities are aligned with the background magnetic field
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Dipole antenna with l >> λ
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Aspect conditions ψ ψ phase front
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HF Propagation Ionospheric scatter Ground scatter Radar n <1 n = 1 h x HF: f N ~ f 0 10-20 MHz
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SuperDARN Super Dual Auroral Radar Network
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Dual Radar Network
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Things to remeber: Backscatter signals are produced by plasma structures with Bragg scale sizes, l = λ/2 Most of the backscatter power comes form areas where the radio wave propagates orthogonally to the geomagnetic field, k B 0 HF signals are capable of over-the-horizon propagation due to consecutive reflections from the ionosphere and the ground
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