A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system

The CUTLASS Finland radar, which comprises an integral part of the SuperDARN system of HF coherent radars, provides near continuous observations of high-latitude plasma irregularities within a field-of-view which extends over some four million square kilometres. Within the Finland radar field-of-vie...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J. A. Davies, Mark Lester, Stephen E. Milan, T. K. Yeoman
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_comparison_of_velocity_measurements_from_the_CUTLASS_Finland_radar_and_the_EISCAT_UHF_system/10113575
id ftleicesterunfig:oai:figshare.com:article/10113575
record_format openpolar
spelling ftleicesterunfig:oai:figshare.com:article/10113575 2023-05-15T16:04:18+02:00 A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system J. A. Davies Mark Lester Stephen E. Milan T. K. Yeoman 1999-07-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_comparison_of_velocity_measurements_from_the_CUTLASS_Finland_radar_and_the_EISCAT_UHF_system/10113575 unknown 2381/18360 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_comparison_of_velocity_measurements_from_the_CUTLASS_Finland_radar_and_the_EISCAT_UHF_system/10113575 All Rights Reserved Uncategorized Science & Technology Physical Sciences Astronomy & Astrophysics Geosciences Multidisciplinary Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences Geology ionosphere (ionospheric irregularities plasma convection) AURORAL BACKSCATTER EXPERIMENT SMALL-SCALE IRREGULARITIES HIGH-LATITUDE CONVECTION UNSTABLE PLASMA-WAVES POLAR E-REGION IONOSPHERIC IRREGULARITIES F-REGION HF RADARS DRIFT RADIO Text Journal contribution 1999 ftleicesterunfig 2021-11-11T20:05:33Z The CUTLASS Finland radar, which comprises an integral part of the SuperDARN system of HF coherent radars, provides near continuous observations of high-latitude plasma irregularities within a field-of-view which extends over some four million square kilometres. Within the Finland radar field-of-view lie both the EISCAT mainland and EISCAT Svalbard incoherent scatter radar facilities. Since the CUTLASS Finland radar commenced operation, in February 1995, the mainland EISCAT UHF radar has been run in common programme 1 and 2 modes for a total duration exceeding 1000 h. Simultaneous and spatially coincident returns from these two radars over this period provide the basis for a comparison of irregularity drift velocity and F-region ion velocity. Initial comparison is limited to velocities from four intervals of simultaneous radar returns; intervals are selected such that they exhibit a variety of velocity signatures including that characteristic of the convection reversal and a rapidly fluctuating velocity feature. Subsequent comparison is on a statistical basis. The velocities measured by the two systems demonstrate reasonable correspondence over the velocity regime encountered during the simultaneous occurrence of coherent and incoherent scatter; differences between the EISCAT UHF measurements of F-region ion drift and the irregularity drift velocities from the Finland radar are explained in terms of a number of contributing factors including contamination of the latter by E-region echoes, a factor which is investigated further, and the potentially deleterious effect of discrepant volume and time sampling intervals. Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper EISCAT Svalbard University of Leicester: Figshare Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection University of Leicester: Figshare
op_collection_id ftleicesterunfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorized
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Geosciences
Multidisciplinary
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Geology
ionosphere (ionospheric irregularities
plasma convection)
AURORAL BACKSCATTER EXPERIMENT
SMALL-SCALE IRREGULARITIES
HIGH-LATITUDE CONVECTION
UNSTABLE PLASMA-WAVES
POLAR E-REGION
IONOSPHERIC IRREGULARITIES
F-REGION
HF RADARS
DRIFT
RADIO
spellingShingle Uncategorized
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Geosciences
Multidisciplinary
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Geology
ionosphere (ionospheric irregularities
plasma convection)
AURORAL BACKSCATTER EXPERIMENT
SMALL-SCALE IRREGULARITIES
HIGH-LATITUDE CONVECTION
UNSTABLE PLASMA-WAVES
POLAR E-REGION
IONOSPHERIC IRREGULARITIES
F-REGION
HF RADARS
DRIFT
RADIO
J. A. Davies
Mark Lester
Stephen E. Milan
T. K. Yeoman
A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system
topic_facet Uncategorized
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Geosciences
Multidisciplinary
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Geology
ionosphere (ionospheric irregularities
plasma convection)
AURORAL BACKSCATTER EXPERIMENT
SMALL-SCALE IRREGULARITIES
HIGH-LATITUDE CONVECTION
UNSTABLE PLASMA-WAVES
POLAR E-REGION
IONOSPHERIC IRREGULARITIES
F-REGION
HF RADARS
DRIFT
RADIO
description The CUTLASS Finland radar, which comprises an integral part of the SuperDARN system of HF coherent radars, provides near continuous observations of high-latitude plasma irregularities within a field-of-view which extends over some four million square kilometres. Within the Finland radar field-of-view lie both the EISCAT mainland and EISCAT Svalbard incoherent scatter radar facilities. Since the CUTLASS Finland radar commenced operation, in February 1995, the mainland EISCAT UHF radar has been run in common programme 1 and 2 modes for a total duration exceeding 1000 h. Simultaneous and spatially coincident returns from these two radars over this period provide the basis for a comparison of irregularity drift velocity and F-region ion velocity. Initial comparison is limited to velocities from four intervals of simultaneous radar returns; intervals are selected such that they exhibit a variety of velocity signatures including that characteristic of the convection reversal and a rapidly fluctuating velocity feature. Subsequent comparison is on a statistical basis. The velocities measured by the two systems demonstrate reasonable correspondence over the velocity regime encountered during the simultaneous occurrence of coherent and incoherent scatter; differences between the EISCAT UHF measurements of F-region ion drift and the irregularity drift velocities from the Finland radar are explained in terms of a number of contributing factors including contamination of the latter by E-region echoes, a factor which is investigated further, and the potentially deleterious effect of discrepant volume and time sampling intervals.
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author J. A. Davies
Mark Lester
Stephen E. Milan
T. K. Yeoman
author_facet J. A. Davies
Mark Lester
Stephen E. Milan
T. K. Yeoman
author_sort J. A. Davies
title A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system
title_short A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system
title_full A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system
title_fullStr A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of velocity measurements from the CUTLASS Finland radar and the EISCAT UHF system
title_sort comparison of velocity measurements from the cutlass finland radar and the eiscat uhf system
publishDate 1999
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_comparison_of_velocity_measurements_from_the_CUTLASS_Finland_radar_and_the_EISCAT_UHF_system/10113575
geographic Svalbard
geographic_facet Svalbard
genre EISCAT
Svalbard
genre_facet EISCAT
Svalbard
op_relation 2381/18360
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/A_comparison_of_velocity_measurements_from_the_CUTLASS_Finland_radar_and_the_EISCAT_UHF_system/10113575
op_rights All Rights Reserved
_version_ 1766399982229782528