GNSS Scintillations in the Cusp, and the Role of Precipitating Particle Energy Fluxes

Author:

Ivarsen Magnus F.12ORCID,Jin Yaqi1ORCID,Spicher Andres3ORCID,St‐Maurice Jean‐Pierre24ORCID,Park Jaeheung56ORCID,Billett Daniel2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics University of Oslo Oslo Norway

2. Department of Physics and Engineering Physics University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon SK Canada

3. Department of Physics and Technology UiT The Arctic University of Norway Tromsø Norway

4. Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Western Ontario London ON Canada

5. Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute Daejeon South Korea

6. Department of Astronomy and Space Science Korea University of Science and Technology Daejeon South Korea

Abstract

AbstractUsing a large data set of ground‐based GNSS scintillation observations coupled with in situ particle detector data, we perform a statistical analysis of both the input energy flux from precipitating particles, and the observed occurrence of density irregularities in the northern hemisphere cusp. By examining trends in the two data sets relating to geomagnetic activity, we conclude that observations of irregularities in the cusp grows increasingly likely during storm‐time, whereas the precipitating particle energy flux does not. We thus find a weak or nonexistent statistical link between geomagnetic activity and precipitating particle energy flux in the cusp. This is a result of a previously documented tendency for the cusp energy flux to maximize during northward IMF, when density irregularities tend not to be widespread, as we demonstrate. At any rate, even though ionization and subsequent density gradients directly caused by soft electron precipitation in the cusp are not to be ignored for the trigger of irregularities, our results point to the need to scrutinize additional physical processes for the creation of irregularities causing scintillations in and around the cusp. While numerous phenomena known to cause density irregularities have been identified and described, there is a need for a systematic evaluation of the conditions under which the various destabilizing mechanisms become important and how they sculpt the observed ionospheric “irregularity landscape.” As such, we call for a quantitative assessment of the role of particle precipitation in the cusp, given that other factors contribute to the production of irregularities in a major way.

Funder

Canadian Space Agency

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Geophysics

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