Eighteen photos in a grid. Each features a background of green light reminiscent of the northern lights, with clusters of red dots in the middle.
Researchers collected images of echo locations, or structures containing plasma turbulence in the thin, ionospheric plasma about 110 kilometers (68 miles) above Earth’s surface. Each image was taken straight up toward the sky, and the bright white light seen toward the top of some frames is from the Moon. Credit: Magnus Ivarsen/TREx RGB
Source: Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics

At night, charged particles from the Sun caught by Earth’s magnetosphere rain down into the atmosphere. The impacting particles rip electrons from atoms in the atmosphere, creating both beauty and chaos. These high-energy interactions cause the northern and southern lights, but they also scatter radio signals, wreaking havoc on ground-based and satellite communications.

Scientists would like to track electrical activity in the ionosphere by measuring the distribution of plasma, the form matter takes when positive ions are separated from their electrons, to help better predict how communications will be affected by electromagnetic energy.

But analyzing plasma in the ionosphere is a challenge because its distribution changes quickly and its movements are often unpredictable. In addition, collisional physics makes detecting true motion in the lower ionosphere exceedingly difficult.

Using a dataset from a radar system called ICEBEAR (Ionospheric Continuous-wave E region Bistatic Experimental Auroral Radar), Ivarsen et al. applied a new algorithm that can detect clusters of radar echoes indicating plasma structures as small as a meter across and track their movement in the ionosphere. From the movement of these structures, researchers can infer the properties of the electric field causing their motion.

The researchers tested their system using data from days during which ionospheric activity was difficult to parse using conventional methods. The results were consistent with those from simultaneous low-Earth-orbit satellite measurements, which currently offer one of the few ways of understanding these high-energy interactions.

Combining the high-resolution data from ICEBEAR with the new algorithm makes it possible to track the motion of electric field bursts, the researchers conclude. However, they note that some of these bursts may be too quick or localized for the algorithm to handle, so further improving the technique to identify patterns with greater nuance is a natural next step. The findings may help scientists predict when and how communications will be disrupted. Coupled with computer vision techniques, they could also help scientists design communication methods that are resilient in the face of electromagnetic activity in space. (Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JA033060, 2024)

—Saima May Sidik, Science Writer

Citation: Sidik, S. M. (2024), Radar reveals electrical activity in the ionosphere, Eos, 105, https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EO240556. Published on 18 December 2024.
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