Title
The Case for Combining a Large Low-Band Very High Frequency Transmitter With Multiple Receiving Arrays for Geospace Research: A Geospace Radar
Date Issued
01 January 2019
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Hysell D.L.
Chau J.L.
Coles W.A.
Obenberger K.
Vierinen J.
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
We argue that combining a high-power, large-aperture radar transmitter with several large-aperture receiving arrays to make a geospace radar—a radar capable of probing near-Earth space from the upper troposphere through to the solar corona—would transform geospace research. We review the emergence of incoherent scatter radar in the 1960s as an agent that unified early, pioneering research in geospace in a common theoretical, experimental, and instrumental framework, and we suggest that a geospace radar would have a similar effect on future developments in space weather research. We then discuss recent developments in radio-array technology that could be exploited in the development of a geospace radar with new or substantially improved capabilities compared to the radars in use presently. A number of applications for a geospace radar with the new and improved capabilities are reviewed including studies of meteor echoes, mesospheric and stratospheric turbulence, ionospheric flows, plasmaspheric and ionospheric irregularities, and reflection from the solar corona and coronal mass ejections. We conclude with a summary of technical requirements.
Start page
533
End page
551
Volume
54
Issue
7
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85070316891
Source
Radio Science
ISSN of the container
00486604
Sponsor(s)
The Jicamarca Radio Observatory is a facility of the Instituto Geofisíco del Perú operated with support from NSF Award AGS-1732209 to Cornell. Data in this manuscript can be found in the Madrigal database (http://www.openmadrigal.org).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus