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Ionospheric Space Weather: Longitude Dependence and Lower Atmosphere Forcing

ISBN: 978-1-118-92921-6

November 2016

American Geophysical Union

312 pages

Description

This monograph is the outcome of an American Geophysical Union Chapman Conference on longitude and hemispheric dependence of ionospheric space weather, including the impact of waves propagating from the lower atmosphere. The Chapman Conference was held in Africa as a means of focusing attention on an extensive geographic region where observations are critically needed to address some of the fundamental questions of the physical processes driving the ionosphere locally and globally.  The compilation of papers from the conference describes the physics of this system and the mechanisms that control ionospheric space weather in a combination of tutorial-like and focused articles that will be of value to the upper atmosphere scientific community in general and to ongoing global magnetosphere-ionosphere-thermosphere (MIT) modeling efforts in particular. A number of articles from each science theme describe details of the physics behind each phenomenon that help to solve the complexity of the MIT system. Because this volume is an outcome of the research presented at this first space science Chapman Conference held in Africa, it has further provided an opportunity for African scientists to communicate their research results with the international community. In addition, the meeting and this conference volume will greatly enhance the space science education and research interest in the African continent and around the world.

Ionospheric Space Weather includes articles from six science themes that were discussed at the Chapman Conference in 2012. These include:

  • Hemispherical dependence of magnetospheric energy injection and the thermosphere-ionosphere response
  • Longitude and hemispheric dependence of storm-enhanced densities (SED)
  • Response of the thermosphere and ionosphere to variability in solar radiation
  • Longitude spatial structure in total electron content and electrodynamics
  • Temporal response to lower-atmosphere disturbances
  • Ionospheric irregularities and scintillation

Ionospheric Space Weather: Longitude Dependence and Lower Atmosphere Forcing will be useful to both active researchers and advanced graduate students in the field of physics, geophysics, and engineering, especially those who are keen to acquire a global understanding of ionospheric phenomena, including observational information from all longitude sectors across the globe.

About the Author

Dr. Tim Fuller-Rowell is a Senior Research Scientist and a Fellow of the Cooperative  Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. Tim has contributed book chapters in the AGU GM series and journal articles in AGU journal JGR and Geophysical Research Letters. He has co-edited an AGU volume in the GM series.

Dr. Endawoke Yizengaw is a Senior Research Scientist in the Institute for Scientific Research, at the Boston College. Endawoke has published journal articles in AGU journal JGR and Geophysical Research Letters.

Ms. Patricia H. Doherty is the Director and Senior Scientist in the Institute for Scientific Research at the Boston College.

Dr. Sunanda Basu is a Senior Research Physicist in the Institute for Scientific Research at the Boston College. She has been the Former Program Director of Aeronomy, NSF Division of Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences (1992-2002). She has also been the Chair, SCOSTEP Program on Climate and Weather of the Sun-Earth System (2002-2006) and former Chair of the AGU Development Board (2010-2012). Sunanda has published several journal articles in AGU journal JGR and Geophysical Research Letters.