Abstract
The generation mechanism for the ionization irregularities in the upper atmosphere which are responsible for radio star scintillations is considered. The general belief that scintillations are related to the spread-F phenomenon observed on ionosonde recordings is found to be an inadequate explanation for the scintillations at 53 Mc/s recorded at Ottawa. An examination of the Ottawa recordings shows that there is a definite association, both in time of occurrence and geographical location, with those ionospheric disturbances that are usually considered to be due to incoming solar particles. Since other workers at more southerly geomagnetic latitudes have associated their scintillation observations with the spread-F phenomenon which they consider to be independent of auroral activity, it would appear that two mechanisms, at least, are responsible for the radio star fluctuations: namely, the precipitation of solar corpuscles and a mechanism linked with the spread-F phenomenon. The former seems to predominate at high latitudes, the latter is probably predominant at low latitudes, while both mechanisms probably are operative in middle latitudes.
Keywords

This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit: