2005 Incoherent Scatter Coordinated Observation Days
URSI-ISWG

In the following table, column 2 gives the start and end date of the experiment, column 3 gives the day of the week of the start of the experiment, column 4 is the length of the experiment and column 5 shows the date of the new moon.

Incoherent Scatter Coordinated Observation Days should start at 1300 UT on the first day indicated (to ensure that all radars are operating correctly by 1600 UT) and end at 0500 UT on the last day indicated to optimize coverage for storm-time and other electro-magnetic events. (Note that 0500 UT is midnight EST.) At the request of the modeling community, runs should be a minimum of 3 days.

2005 Incoherent Scatter Coordinated Observation Days

Observation Dates Starting
Day
Observation
Length (days)
New Moon Notes
January

10
February

8
March 7-12
or
March 28-April 2
or
April 18-23
Monday

Monday


Monday
4-2/3

4-2/3


4-2/3
Mar 10



Apr 8
First choice M-I Coupling: (One of the 5-day periods listed, selected one month in advance)
Second choice Synoptic: wide F-region coverage
Third choice GPS-Radar: wide F-region coverage (with topside at AO and JRO)
Also CPEA
May

8
June 14-18 Monday 4-2/3 6 LTCS -- MST
July

6
August 10-13
Wednesday
3
5 Meteoric Ionization
September 1-30 Thursday 30
(best effort)
3 LTCS -- MST: for long period waves
October

3
November 8-12 Monday 3-2/3 2 C/NOFS: wide F-region coverage
November 17-20 Thursday 3 2 Meteoric Ionization
December

1/31
Total
Up to 58-1/3

Last updated: Friday, 2004 September 24



Real-Time Data Links (when available)

Jicamarca Arecibo Millstone Hill Sondre Stromfjord EISCAT
EISCAT Svalbard Kharkov Irkutsk MU SuperDARN

Send comments, questions and proposals for the World Day schedule to Wes Swartz at wes@ece.cornell.edu.

World Day Facts

Establishing "World Day" schedules is one of the activities of the URSI Incoherent Scatter Working Group (ISWG) and the CEDAR meeting has provided a timely forum for scheduling coordinated experiments at the Upper Atmospheric Facilities (UAFs) for the next calendar year. These schedules are then published as part of the International Geophysical Calendar. Here are some of the facts about world days: Requests for World Day experiments should:

Notes on World Day observations proposed for 2005

LTCS (Lower Thermosphere Coupling Study): Tidal Variability

After 17 years of collecting ISR data in the lower thermosphere under the LTCS (Lower Thermosphere Coupling Study) program, the basic structure of tides is relatively well understood with the most striking single property of atmospheric tides being the very large variability of tidal amplitudes. Possible sources for this variability include non-migrating tides, planetary waves, and geomagnetic influences. Now efforts must focus on the sources of this tidal variability and are conditioned on obtaining wind and temperature data from altitudes between 100 and ~130-140 km. The program requires synoptic lower thermospheric observations during two intervals of 4-5 days each per year. The 30-day run (the "World Month") planned for 2005 will particularly address longer period waves, e.g., the 5 to 16-day waves. (See special note on this long run below.) We plan to coordinate the analysis of this data with SABER temperature data, TIDI mesospheric winds, and MF/meteor radar winds. Examples and further information.
Contact: Larisa P. Goncharenko

M-I Coupling (Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling): Storm and Substorm Effects on the Middle- and Low-Latitude Ionosphere

Magnetic storms and substorms are fundamental disturbances in the magnetosphere and can significantly increase, or decrease ionopheric electron densities (termed positive or negative storms, repectively). Electric fields originating in the magnetosphere can penetrate to the low-latitude ionosphere resulting in vertical motions that restructure the F-region density profiles due to the height dependence of the recombination rate. Substorm electric fields can change F-peak densities by 20-30% within one hour and correspondingly large changes also occur in TEC at low latitudes. There are a number of outstanding problems with the effects of storms and substorms on the middle- and low-latitude ionosphere that remain unsolved. Radar chain measurements of the ionospheric plasma parameters (velocity, density, and temperature) are needed to solve, or partially solve, these problems. A magnetic storm generally lasts for 2-3 days. Periodic substorms often occur over a time interval of 10-30 hours during storms. Substorms evolve over 2-3 hours while penetration elecric fields occur with times scales on the order of 30 minutes. The radar chain experiments should therefore last 5-7 days to include some quiet times before and after the storm, and have a reasonably high time resolution of 5-15 minutes.
Millstone Hill data from the M-I Coupling World Day of 2004 April 4 show factors of 2 to 3 increases in F-region electron densites. Unfortunately the SSC began just at the end of the regular World Day period and the other observatories missed the event, except for the Jicamarca Digisonde which did observe similar increases. Examples and further information.
Contact: Chaosong Huang

GPS-Radar: (Global Plasma Structuring-Radar Experiment): Thermal plasma coupling between low, mid, and high latitudes.

Recent multi-technique observations have shown that the equatorial ionosphere and inner plasmashpere are coupled from low to auroral latitudes by electric fields and plumes of storm enhanced electron densities which feed tongues of ionization into the polar caps. This global mechanism carries low-latitude dayside plasma into the nightside auroral ionosphere. These events cause significant space weather effects during major magnetic storms, but also occur during less-disturbed conditions.
Wide latitude coverage is needed to study such events and should include Experiments should be conducted during the Spring and Fall Equinoxes for 2 full days with the moon down.
Contact: John Foster

Meteoric Ions: (Global observations of ionization created by the Perseids and Leonids)

During the 2002 Leonids, the EISCAT UHF radar detected enhanced ionization between 90 and 180 km with densities up to 3.3 x 10^11 m-3. No systematic study of such enhancements has yet been performed. Three day runs for the Perseids (starting on August 10 at 0900 UT) and for the Leonids (starting on November 17 at 1600 UT) are suggested. Examples and further information.
Contact: Ingemar Haggstrom

Synoptic:

These synoptic experiments are intended to emphasize wide coverage of the F-region, with some augmented coverage of the topside or E-region to fill in areas of the data bases that have relatively little data. The emphasis should be on broad latitudinal coverage of the F region.
Contact: Wes Swartz

C/NOFS: Communications / Navigation Outage Forecasting System

The primary purpose of C/NOFS is to forecast the presence of ionospheric irregularities that adversely impact communication and navigation systems through
(1) improved understanding of the physical processes active in the background ionosphere and thermosphere in which plasma instabilities grow;
(2) the identification of those mechanisms that trigger or quench the plasma irregularities responsible for signal degradation; and
(3) determining how the plasma irregularities affect the propagation of electro-magnetic waves.
A satellite, now scheduled for launch in December 2004 into a low inclination (13°), elliptical (~ 400 x 700 km) orbit will be solely dedicated to the C/NOFS objectives. It will be equipped with sensors that measure ambient and fluctuating electron densities, ion and electron temperatures, AC and DC electric fields, magnetic fields, neutral winds, ionospheric scintillations, and electron content along the lines of sight between C/NOFS and the Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite constellation. The orbit will have a 45-day repeating precession. Complementary ground-based measurements including the Jicamarca and Altair radars are also critical to the success of the mission. Calibration comparisons will be scheduled for local noon in Northern Spring/Summer 2005 and validation comparisons will be during local nighttime in Fall 2005 and Winter 2006. Requests for additional UAF radar time beyond the currently scheduled World Days are to be made directly to the respective observatory staffs once orbital characteristics are known. Contacts: Odile de La Bedaujardiere, David Hysell, Wes Swartz

CPEA: Coupling Processes in the Equatorial Atmosphere

This is an initiative for studing the coupling of dynamical coupling processes in the equatorial atmosphere from the troposphere up through the theromosphere and ionosphere centered around the Indonesian Equatorial Atmospheric Radar (EAR). Oportunities for collaborations initally focused on the successful March-April 2004 campain period. See highlights.
Contacts:Shoichiro Fukao, Project Leader, Sunanda Basu, Janet Kozyra

MST: Studies of the Mesosphere, Stratosphere, and Troposphere

Coordinated D- and E-region campaigns are proposed where the ISR's and supporting instruments focus on their lower altitude capabilities. JRO would use their high resolution MST mode, while Arecibo would use a dual mode of D- and E-region drifts (with accompanying lidar & imaging measurements). The main interest would be in obtaining gravity wave momentum fluxes. Minimum requirements would be winds with a time resolution of one or two minutes and a height resolution 450 meters or better. It may be possible to collect the lower atmospheric winds at Jicamarca with little or no adverse impact to the upper atmospheric/ionospheric measurements and may tie nicely in with the LTCS World Day periods.
Contacts: Gerald Lehmacher, Erhan Kudeki, Jorge L. Chau.

World Week: Searching for Long Period Effects

Studies of long period waves and tides require measurements over many sequential days. This 30-day run should provide an unprecedented data set for such studies. Experimental modes should emphasize the lower thermosphere as for the LTCS campaigns. It is anticipated that not all of the UAFs will be able to run for the full 30-day period, in which case only a "best effort" is ask for. For example, Sixto Gonzales of the Arecibo Observatory suggested that they could only run for about 10 of the 30 days, and these 10 may need to be in two groups of 5 days each. Labor or power saving modes may be adapted at some sites. For example, John Foster of Millston Hill suggested that they would probably limit their runs to just the daytime hours. Further specific details are yet to be worked out.
Examples and further information.
Contacts: Larisa P. Goncharenko , and Wes Swartz.



Updated Friday, 2004 September 24 by Wes Swartz, Chairman of the URSI Incoherent Scatter Working Group.