Affiliation:
1. Retired Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore CA USA
Abstract
AbstractDramatic irregularities in the plasma density of the ionosphere, first discovered by their effects on radio wave propagation in 1938, despite decades of investigation, still remain puzzling. Their deleterious effects on radio wave communication, satellite command and control, and GPS navigation strongly motivate better understanding of their nature. Many aspects of such irregularities are now understood, but the mechanism(s) of their formation and their detailed nature remain a topic of great interest. In this work, detailed time resolved measurements of lightning generated waves sometimes show dispersionless, strongly attenuated propagation with substantial propagation delays. These characteristics of the electromagnetic wave propagation in the hypothetical two‐phase bubble/non‐bubble lower ionosphere parallel the characteristics of acoustic wave propagation through two‐phase liquid/vapor foams. This motivates the suggestion that the bottomside layer of the ionosphere may sometimes be foamy.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Geophysics