Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/14658
Authors: De Michelis, Paola* 
Consolini, Giuseppe* 
Pignalberi, Alessio* 
Tozzi, Roberta* 
Coco, Igino* 
Giannattasio, Fabio* 
Pezzopane, Michael* 
Balasis, Georgios* 
Title: Looking for a proxy of the ionospheric turbulence with Swarm data
Journal: Scientific Reports 
Series/Report no.: /11 (2021)
Publisher: Nature P. G.
Issue Date: 17-Mar-2021
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-84985-1
Keywords: Turbulence
High-latitude ionosphere
electron density fluctuations
Swarm constellation
Subject Classification01.02. Ionosphere 
Abstract: The present work focuses on the analysis of the scaling features of electron density fluctuations in the mid- and high-latitude topside ionosphere under different conditions of geomagnetic activity. The aim is to understand whether it is possible to identify a proxy that may provide information on the properties of electron density fluctuations and on the possible physical mechanisms at their origin, as for instance, turbulence phenomena. So, we selected about 4 years (April 2014–February 2018) of 1 Hz electron density measurements recorded on-board ESA Swarm A satellite. Using the Auroral Electrojet (AE) index, we identified two different geomagnetic conditions: quiet (AE < 50 nT) and active (AE > 300 nT). For both datasets, we evaluated the first- and second-order scaling exponents and an intermittency coefficient associated with the electron density fluctuations. Then, the joint probability distribution between each of these quantities and the rate of change of electron density index was also evaluated. We identified two families of plasma density fluctuations characterized by different mean values of both the scaling exponents and the considered ionospheric index, suggesting that different mechanisms (instabilities/turbulent processes) can be responsible for the observed scaling features. Furthermore, a clear different localization of the two families in the magnetic latitude— magnetic local time plane is found and its dependence on geomagnetic activity levels is analyzed. These results may well have a bearing about the capability of recognizing the turbulent character of irregularities using a typical ionospheric plasma irregularity index as a proxy
Appears in Collections:Article published / in press

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat
DeMichelis_SR_2021.pdfOpen Access6.76 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record

Page view(s)

876
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Download(s)

14
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric