GPS scintillation effects associated with polar cap patches and substorm auroral activity: direct comparison

We directly compare the relative GPS scintillation levels associated with regions of enhanced plasma irregularities called auroral arcs, polar cap patches, and auroral blobs that frequently occur in the polar ionosphere. On January 13, 2013 from Ny-Ålesund, several polar cap patches were observed to...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate
Main Authors: Jin Yaqi, Moen Jøran I., Miloch Wojciech J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/swsc/2014019
https://doaj.org/article/1268f4dffcf14e18bd35adae97f3f1fa
Description
Summary:We directly compare the relative GPS scintillation levels associated with regions of enhanced plasma irregularities called auroral arcs, polar cap patches, and auroral blobs that frequently occur in the polar ionosphere. On January 13, 2013 from Ny-Ålesund, several polar cap patches were observed to exit the polar cap into the auroral oval, and were then termed auroral blobs. This gave us an unprecedented opportunity to compare the relative scintillation levels associated with these three phenomena. The blobs were associated with the strongest phase scintillation (σϕ), followed by patches and arcs, with σϕ up to 0.6, 0.5, and 0.1 rad, respectively. Our observations indicate that most patches in the nightside polar cap have produced significant scintillations, but not all of them. Since the blobs are formed after patches merged into auroral regions, in space weather predictions of GPS scintillations, it will be important to enable predictions of patches exiting the polar cap.