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Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters

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Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters. / Walach, Maria; Grocott, Adrian; Staples, Frances et al.
2019. Poster session presented at National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Poster

Harvard

Walach, M, Grocott, A, Staples, F & Thomas, E 2019, 'Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters', National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom, 30/06/19 - 4/07/19.

APA

Walach, M., Grocott, A., Staples, F., & Thomas, E. (2019). Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters. Poster session presented at National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Walach M, Grocott A, Staples F, Thomas E. Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters. 2019. Poster session presented at National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Author

Walach, Maria ; Grocott, Adrian ; Staples, Frances et al. / Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters. Poster session presented at National Astronomy Meeting 2019, Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{f0d96ebb02aa439183377c541cd011ab,
title = "Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters",
abstract = "The Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) was built to study ionospheric convection at Earth and has in recent years been expanded equatorward to observe ionospheric flows over a larger latitude range. The SuperDARN expansion to midlatitudes started in 2005 with the building of the Wallops Island Radar at 37.93 degrees geographic latitude, and a geographic longitude of -75.47 degrees. Since then, nine more mid-latitude radars have been added to the network, allowing us to measure ionospheric convection on a larger scale than ever before. Using data from the years 2012 to 2018, we perform a statistical analysis on processed SuperDARN convection maps for the entire dataset.  We process a number of versions of the maps, using different background models both with and without the inclusion of data from midlatitude radars. This enables us to explore the difference the addition these radars make to the dataset, as well as simulate how much information was missing from the previous decades of SuperDARN research. To show the importance of growing the radar network to include measurements at mid-latitudes we study a variety of parameters, such as changes in the equatorward boundary of the ionospheric electric field, changes in the cross polar cap potential, changes in the locations of the minimum and maximum potentials, and the width of the return flow region. We show that there is a clear difference between the datasets, especially when comparing the measured parameters to geomagnetic indices, such as AL.",
author = "Maria Walach and Adrian Grocott and Frances Staples and Evan Thomas",
year = "2019",
month = jul,
day = "3",
language = "English",
note = "National Astronomy Meeting 2019, NAM 2019 ; Conference date: 30-06-2019 Through 04-07-2019",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Influences of the equatorward SuperDARN expansion on data coverage and measured parameters

AU - Walach, Maria

AU - Grocott, Adrian

AU - Staples, Frances

AU - Thomas, Evan

PY - 2019/7/3

Y1 - 2019/7/3

N2 - The Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) was built to study ionospheric convection at Earth and has in recent years been expanded equatorward to observe ionospheric flows over a larger latitude range. The SuperDARN expansion to midlatitudes started in 2005 with the building of the Wallops Island Radar at 37.93 degrees geographic latitude, and a geographic longitude of -75.47 degrees. Since then, nine more mid-latitude radars have been added to the network, allowing us to measure ionospheric convection on a larger scale than ever before. Using data from the years 2012 to 2018, we perform a statistical analysis on processed SuperDARN convection maps for the entire dataset.  We process a number of versions of the maps, using different background models both with and without the inclusion of data from midlatitude radars. This enables us to explore the difference the addition these radars make to the dataset, as well as simulate how much information was missing from the previous decades of SuperDARN research. To show the importance of growing the radar network to include measurements at mid-latitudes we study a variety of parameters, such as changes in the equatorward boundary of the ionospheric electric field, changes in the cross polar cap potential, changes in the locations of the minimum and maximum potentials, and the width of the return flow region. We show that there is a clear difference between the datasets, especially when comparing the measured parameters to geomagnetic indices, such as AL.

AB - The Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) was built to study ionospheric convection at Earth and has in recent years been expanded equatorward to observe ionospheric flows over a larger latitude range. The SuperDARN expansion to midlatitudes started in 2005 with the building of the Wallops Island Radar at 37.93 degrees geographic latitude, and a geographic longitude of -75.47 degrees. Since then, nine more mid-latitude radars have been added to the network, allowing us to measure ionospheric convection on a larger scale than ever before. Using data from the years 2012 to 2018, we perform a statistical analysis on processed SuperDARN convection maps for the entire dataset.  We process a number of versions of the maps, using different background models both with and without the inclusion of data from midlatitude radars. This enables us to explore the difference the addition these radars make to the dataset, as well as simulate how much information was missing from the previous decades of SuperDARN research. To show the importance of growing the radar network to include measurements at mid-latitudes we study a variety of parameters, such as changes in the equatorward boundary of the ionospheric electric field, changes in the cross polar cap potential, changes in the locations of the minimum and maximum potentials, and the width of the return flow region. We show that there is a clear difference between the datasets, especially when comparing the measured parameters to geomagnetic indices, such as AL.

M3 - Poster

T2 - National Astronomy Meeting 2019

Y2 - 30 June 2019 through 4 July 2019

ER -