Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars

Meteor head echo altitude distributions have been derived from data collected with the EISCAT VHF (224MHz) and UHF (930MHz) high-power, large-aperture (HPLA) radars. At the high-altitude end, the distributions cut off abruptly in a manner reminiscent of the trail echo height ceiling effect observed...

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Published in:Annales Geophysicae
Main Authors: Westman, A., Wannberg, G., Pellinen-Wannberg, A.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-22-1575-2004
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/22/1575/2004/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:angeo35188 2023-05-15T16:04:37+02:00 Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars Westman, A. Wannberg, G. Pellinen-Wannberg, A. 2018-09-27 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-22-1575-2004 https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/22/1575/2004/ eng eng doi:10.5194/angeo-22-1575-2004 https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/22/1575/2004/ eISSN: 1432-0576 Text 2018 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-22-1575-2004 2020-07-20T16:27:37Z Meteor head echo altitude distributions have been derived from data collected with the EISCAT VHF (224MHz) and UHF (930MHz) high-power, large-aperture (HPLA) radars. At the high-altitude end, the distributions cut off abruptly in a manner reminiscent of the trail echo height ceiling effect observed with classical meteor radars. The target dimensions are shown to be much smaller than both the VHF and the UHF probing wavelengths, but the cutoff heights for the two systems are still clearly different, the VHF cutoff being located several km above the UHF one. A single-collision meteor-atmosphere interaction model is used to demonstrate that meteors in the (1.3–7.2) µ g mass range will ionise such that critical electron density at 224MHz is first reached at or around the VHF cutoff altitude and critical density at 930MHz will be reached at the UHF cutoff altitude. The observed seasonal variation in the cutoff altitudes is shown to be a function of the seasonal variation of atmospheric density with altitude. Assuming that the electron density required for detection is in the order of the critical density, the abrupt altitude cutoffs can be explained as a consequence of the micrometeoroid joint size-speed distribution dropping off so fast at the large-mass, high-velocity end that above a certain altitude the number of detectable events becomes vanishingly small. Conversely, meteors at the low-mass end of the distribution will be gradually retarded such that the ionisation they generate never reaches critical density. These particles will remain unobservable. Key words. Radio science (instruments and techniques) – Interplatery physics (interplanetary dust) – General or miscellaneous (new fields) Text EISCAT Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Annales Geophysicae 22 5 1575 1584
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
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language English
description Meteor head echo altitude distributions have been derived from data collected with the EISCAT VHF (224MHz) and UHF (930MHz) high-power, large-aperture (HPLA) radars. At the high-altitude end, the distributions cut off abruptly in a manner reminiscent of the trail echo height ceiling effect observed with classical meteor radars. The target dimensions are shown to be much smaller than both the VHF and the UHF probing wavelengths, but the cutoff heights for the two systems are still clearly different, the VHF cutoff being located several km above the UHF one. A single-collision meteor-atmosphere interaction model is used to demonstrate that meteors in the (1.3–7.2) µ g mass range will ionise such that critical electron density at 224MHz is first reached at or around the VHF cutoff altitude and critical density at 930MHz will be reached at the UHF cutoff altitude. The observed seasonal variation in the cutoff altitudes is shown to be a function of the seasonal variation of atmospheric density with altitude. Assuming that the electron density required for detection is in the order of the critical density, the abrupt altitude cutoffs can be explained as a consequence of the micrometeoroid joint size-speed distribution dropping off so fast at the large-mass, high-velocity end that above a certain altitude the number of detectable events becomes vanishingly small. Conversely, meteors at the low-mass end of the distribution will be gradually retarded such that the ionisation they generate never reaches critical density. These particles will remain unobservable. Key words. Radio science (instruments and techniques) – Interplatery physics (interplanetary dust) – General or miscellaneous (new fields)
format Text
author Westman, A.
Wannberg, G.
Pellinen-Wannberg, A.
spellingShingle Westman, A.
Wannberg, G.
Pellinen-Wannberg, A.
Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars
author_facet Westman, A.
Wannberg, G.
Pellinen-Wannberg, A.
author_sort Westman, A.
title Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars
title_short Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars
title_full Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars
title_fullStr Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars
title_full_unstemmed Meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the EISCAT HPLA UHF and VHF radars
title_sort meteor head echo altitude distributions and the height cutoff effect studied with the eiscat hpla uhf and vhf radars
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-22-1575-2004
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/22/1575/2004/
genre EISCAT
genre_facet EISCAT
op_source eISSN: 1432-0576
op_relation doi:10.5194/angeo-22-1575-2004
https://angeo.copernicus.org/articles/22/1575/2004/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-22-1575-2004
container_title Annales Geophysicae
container_volume 22
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1575
op_container_end_page 1584
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