Preliminary results of 400-MC radar investigations of auroral echoes at college, Alaska
- 1 April 1959
- journal article
- Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation
- Vol. 7 (2) , 127-136
- https://doi.org/10.1109/tap.1959.1144664
Abstract
Results of radar investigations of auroral ionization at a frequency of 398 mc are described. The radar detected auroral echoes at College, Alaska (near Fairbanks), even when the line of sight from the transmitter does not intersect the earth's magnetic field lines at perfect perpendicular incidence. The auroral echoes were observed with off-perpendicular intersection angles as great as10\deg. The requirement for near-perpendicular intersection of the radar beam with the earth's magnetic field is therefore met. The auroral echoes at 398 mc were seen frequently. Occasionally they were very strong; those of highest amplitude were as much as 27 db above the receiver noise level. The echoes were detected over a relatively large echoing region corresponding to bearings within\pm 45\degof geomagnetic north, and elevation angles of0\deg-17\deg. Two types of auroral echoes were observed-discrete and diffuse. The discrete echoes corresponded roughly to reflections from visual auroral forms seen at night. The diffuse echoes corresponded to reflections from a large echoing region that apparently existed most often during daylight hours. Estimates of the wavelength,\lambda, dependence of auroral echo power, although quite crude, are deduced as\lambda^{10}for the radar site at College, Alaska, and\lambda^{5}for sites where perpendicular reflection can be obtained.Keywords
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