Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Introduction to Space Weather

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Space Weather"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Space Weather
Ionosphere Nov. 12, 2009 CSI 662 / PHYS 660 Fall, 2009 Jie Zhang Copyright ©

2 Roadmap Part 1: The Sun Part 2: The Heliosphere
Part 3: The Magnetosphere Part 4: The Ionsophere Part 5: Space Weather Effects Part 4: The Ionosphere

3 CSI 662 / PHYS Nov The Ionosphere Height profile and layers Ionization production Ionization loss Radio wave Ionosphere Currents References: Kallenrode: Chap. 8.3 Prolss: Chap. 2, Chap. 4, Chap. 7

4 Plasma Physics Reference: Kallenrode, Chap. 8.3.2
Anisotropic Conductivity: field-aligned, Pederson, and Hall

5 Brief History Fast and Slow Wind
Fluctuation of geomagnetic field by atmospheric current (Kelvin, 1860) First transmitting radio waves across Atlantic (Marconi, 1901) Solar UV radiation responsible for the charge carriers (Kennelly, Heaviside and Lodge 1902) Radio wave experiment on ionosphere (Appleton 1924) Appleton was awarded the Nobel prize for the work of ionospheric physics. Fast and Slow Wind

6 Atmospheric Layers Horizontal Structure of the Terrestrial Atmosphere

7 Atmospheric Layers Classified by temperature Troposphere Stratosphere
0  10 km ~300 K  200 K Stratosphere 10 50 km ~200 K 250 K Mesosphere 50 km  80 km ~250 K  160 K Thermosphere > 80 km (~10000) 160 K  ~1000 K

8 Atmos. Layers Fast and Slow Wind Classified by Gravitational binding
Barosphere 0 km 600 km binding Exosphere > 600 km Escaping or evaporation Classified by Composition Homosphere 0 km 100 km Homogeneous Heterosphere 100 km  ~2000 km Inhomogeneous Hydrogensphere (Geocorona) > ~2000 km Dominated by hydrogen Fast and Slow Wind

9 Basic Parameters Chemical composition (ni/n): Pressure: H He N O N2 O2
Height = 0 km, 78% N2, 21% O2, 1% others (trace gases) Height = 300 km, 78% O, 21% N2, 1% O2 Pressure: Height = 0 km, P = 105 pa Height = 300 km, P=10-5 pa H He N O N2 O2 Atomic Number Mass Number f (Degree of freedom) 3 translation rotation

10 Barospheric Density Distribution
Hydrostatic equilibrium or aerostatic equations Pressure Scale Height Barometric Law isothermal

11 Barospheric Density Distribution
Isothermal Scale Heights Hi = kT/(mig) for g(200 km) HN2 = 0.032* T HO2 = 0.028* T HO = * T N2 O O2 Altitude interval where density decreases by 10:

12 SOLAR - TERRESTRIAL ENERGY SOURCES
Source Energy Solar Cycle Deposition (Wm-2) Change (Wm-2) Altitude Solar Radiation total surface UV nm km VUV nm km Particles electron aurora III km solar protons km galactic cosmic rays km Joule hearing rate taken from Roble et al, JGR, 92, 6083, 1987 Peak Joule Heating (strong storm) E=180 mVm km Solar Wind above 500 km

13 TOTAL IRRADIANCE VARIABILITY
SPECTRUM VARIABILITY

14 Solar Energy Deposition Atmospheric Structure
SPACE WEATHER GLOBAL CHANGE EUV FUV MUV RADIATION

15 Atmospheric Absorption Processes
Ionization O2 + h  O2+ + e*, … Dissociation N2 + h  N + N, … Excitation O + h  O* O* O + h ’ radiation O* + X  O + X quenching or deactivation Dissociative ionization – excitation N2 + h  N+* + N + e, …

16 Ionosphere Structure Classified by Composition D region h < 90 km
Negative ions, e.g., NO3- E region 90 km < h < 170 km O2+, NO+ F region 170 km < h < 1000 km O+ F1 region, F2 region Plasmasphere h > 1000 km H+

17 Ionosphere Structure Height of maximum density: 200 – 400 km
Maximum Ionization Density: 1 – 30 X 1011 m-3 Column Density: 1 – 10 X 1017 m-3 F2 F1 Total ne E

18 Chapman Layer The Chapman profile of an ionospheric layer results from the superposition of the height dependence of the particle density and the flux of the ionizing electromagnetic radiation Chapman Profile

19 Chapman Layer Neutral particle density: barometric height formula
Radiation Intensity: Bougert-Lambert-Beer’s Law

20 Optical Depth Definition For several species
i = N2, O2, O Altitude of unit optical depth: F(z)= F() e-1 Solve (z) = 1 for z Where solar radiation is effectively extinct

21 Continued on November 19, 2009

22 Ionosphere Structure Ionosphere: Weak ionization
Electrons and ions represent trace gases Ion/neutral ratio (n/nn) 10-8 at 100 km 10-3 at 300 km 10-2 at 1000 km

23 Ionization Production
Photoionization Primary Secondary Charge Exchange Particle Precipitation

24 Photoionization Processes Ionization Energies
O + h ( 91.0 nm)  O+ + e O2 + h ( nm)  O2+ + e N2 + h ( 79.6 nm)  N2+ + e Ionization Energies Species Dissociation (Å) (eV) Ionization O O2 N2 2423.7 1270.4 5.11 9.76 910.44 1027.8 796 13.62 12.06 15.57

25 Charge Exchange Charge Exchange Process Charge Exchange Rate
Does not change the total ionization density Important source for NO+ and O2+ in the lower ionosphere Important source for H+ for the plasmasphere

26 Particle Precipitation
Play an important role in high latitude

27 Ionization Loss Dissociative Recombination of Molecular Ions
Ion loss Rate Dissociation Recombination Reaction constants for O2+,N2+, and NO+ Largest reaction constant

28 Ionization Loss Radiative Recombination of Atomic Ions Charge Exchange

29 Ionization Loss E region (O2+)
Dissociative recombination is the quickest way of removing ions and elections

30 Ionization Loss F region (O+)
Charge exchange is the quickest way of removing O+ ions

31 Density Balance Equation
Density is determined by the ion production term, ion loss term and ion diffusion term, for species s Day time: production-loss equilibrium Night time: production is negligible

32 Variation of Ion Density
The ionization production depends on the solar radiation intensity and the zenith angle The ion density shows daily, seasonal variation as well solar rotation and solar cycle effects After sunrise TEC (Total Electron Content) diurnal variation

33 Variation of Ion Density
D and F1-layers may disappear at night

34 Radio Waves in the Ionosphere
Radio wave is altered during its passage through the ionosphere Propagation direction changes: refracted, reflected Intensity changes: attenuated, absorbed

35 Natural Oscillation in a Plasma: Plasma Frequency

36 Forced Oscillation in a Plasma:

37 Ionosphere as a Dielectric
Interaction depends on frequency Nref < 1, radio wave will be refracted according to the familiar Snell’s law. Θ2 > Θ1

38 Ionosphere as a Dielectric
Wave damping due to electron interaction with neutral particles Radio wave (e.g., 5 Mhz) refraction and damping usually occur in the upper D region and lower E region

39 Ionosphere as a Conducting Reflection
Wave interacts strongly with plasma, inducing a large current. Ionosphere acts like a conductor Radio wave is reflected This often occurs in the F-region

40 Radio Wave

41 Ionosonde A special radar to examine ionosphere from ionogram:
Elapsed time  height Frequency  electron density ionosonde

42 Ionosphere Currents

43 Polar Upper Atmosphere
Polar Cap: ~ 30° Polar oval: a few degree Subpolar latitude Fast and Slow Wind

44 Polar Upper Atmosphere
Magnetic field connection Polar Cap: magnetotail lobe region, open field Polar oval: (1) night side: connect to plasma sheet (2) day side: connect to cusp region Subpolar latitude: conjugate dipole field, closed Fast and Slow Wind

45 Convection and Electric Field
Fast and Slow Wind

46 Convection and Electric Field
Polar cap electric field Epc (from measurement) Dawn to dusk direction Epc = 10 mV/m Polar cap potential: ~ 30 kV from 6 LT to 18 LT, over 3000 km Polar oval electric field Dawn sector: equatorward Dusk sector: poleward Epc=30 mV/m Potential drop: ~ 30 kV, counterbalance of the polar cap E Subpolar region electric field < 5 mV/m Fast and Slow Wind

47 Convection and Electric Field
Polar cap convection Caused by E X B drift anti-sunward Drift time scale cross the polar cap ~ 2 hours Polar oval convection Sunward convection Form a close loop with the polar cap convection Two convection cells Drift velocity = 500 m/s, when E=10 mV/m, and B=20000 nT

48 Solar Wind Dynamo Fast and Slow Wind
Polar cap electric field originates from solar wind dynamo electric field Same direction Same overall electric potential drop Electric field is ~ 40 times as strong as in solar wind Fast and Slow Wind

49 Ionosphere Current Fast and Slow Wind
Pederson current: perpendicular B, parallel E ; horizontal Hall current: perpendicular B, perpendicular E ; horizontal Burkeland current: parallel to B ; vertical Fast and Slow Wind

50 Ionosphere Current Fast and Slow Wind
Birkeland current: Field-aligned current Region 1 current: on the poleward side of the polar oval Region 2 current: on the equatorward side of the polar oval Fast and Slow Wind

51 Ionosphere-Magnetosphere Coupling
Region 1 current Magnetotail current is re-directed to the ionosphere Current flows into the ionosphere in the dawn sector Current flows out the ionosphere in the dusk section

52 Ionosphere-Magnetosphere Coupling
Region 2 current Associated magnetic field lines end in the equatorial plane of the dawn and dusk magnetosphere at a geocentric distance of L ≈ 7-10 Driven by excess charge in the dawn and dusk sectors of the dipole field, caused by different particle paths of electrons and ions

53 Ionosphere-Magnetosphere Coupling
Drift of particles from the plasma sheet At small L, curvature-gradient drift dominates Particles can only drift to within a certain distance of the dipole Ions and electrons drifts in different direction along the dipole There is a forbidden zone for ions (electrons) Excess charges accumulate

54 Ionosphere Conductivity
Deriving conductivity σ is to find the drift velocity under the E in the three components: Birkeland σ: parallel to B Pederson σ: parallel to E, E per B Hall σ: per E and B Fast and Slow Wind

55 Ionosphere Conductivity
Parallel conductivity Force equilibrium: Electric force = frictional force No Lorentz force For plasmas (without neutral), Coulomb collision Fast and Slow Wind

56 Ionosphere Conductivity
Transverse conductivity Force equilibrium: Electric force + magnetic force= frictional force Fast and Slow Wind

57 Ionosphere Conductivity
Transverse conductivity Maximum conductivity: Transverse conductivity, especially Hall, confines to a rather narrow range of height (~ 125 km), the so called dynamo layer Fast and Slow Wind

58 The End


Download ppt "Introduction to Space Weather"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google