Title
Detection of radiation from a heated and modulated equatorial electrojet current system
Date Issued
01 December 1984
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Springer Nature
Abstract
In May 1983, ionospheric heating experiments were conducted using the Jicamarca very high frequency (VHF) radar facility located ∼11 km east of Lima, Peru. Experiments involving high frequency (HF) heating of the lower D-region of the ionosphere were successfully conducted during 1982 using the Arecibo, Puerto Rico HF transmitter located 5km east at Islote, Puerto Rico. These local experiments had characterized the signal radiated from a heated and modulated ionospheric current system near the mid-latitudes. A long-path signal had also been received in September 1982 at Salinas, Puerto Rico from a mid-day equatorial electrojet, heated and modulated by the Jicamarca facility. We have investigated the characteristics of the local signal that would be radiated from a strong equatorial electrojet when heated and modulated, and report here that at the geomagnetic equator they were similar to, but less intense than, those observed at Arecibo, Puerto Rico due to parameter differences. This radiation is believed to be the first detected from a heated and modulated equatorial electrojet current system in the Western Hemisphere. © 1984 Nature Publishing Group.
Start page
134
End page
135
Volume
311
Issue
5982
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ingeniería ambiental y geológica
Geografía física
Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas
DOI
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-11544339314
Source
Nature
ISSN of the container
00280836
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus