Title of article
Response of peak electron densities in the martian ionosphere to day-to-day changes in solar flux due to solar rotation
Author/Authors
Withers، نويسنده , , Paul and Mendillo، نويسنده , , Michael، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
18
From page
1401
To page
1418
Abstract
Photochemical Chapman theory predicts that the square of peak electron density, N m , in the dayside ionosphere of Mars is proportional to the cosine of solar zenith angle. We use Mars Global Surveyor Radio Science profiles of electron density to demonstrate that this relationship is generally satisfied and that positive or negative residuals between observed and predicted values of N m 2 are caused by periods of relatively high or low solar flux, respectively.
tanding the response of the martian ionosphere to changes in solar flux requires simultaneous observations of the martian ionosphere and of solar flux at Mars, but solar flux measurements are only available at Earth. Since the Sunʹs output varies both in time and with solar latitude and longitude, solar flux at Mars is not simply related to solar flux at Earth by an inverse-square law. We hypothesize that, when corrected for differing distances from the Sun, solar fluxes at Mars and Earth are identical when shifted in time by the interval necessary for the Sun to rotate through the Earth–Sun–Mars angle.
form four case studies that quantitatively compare time series of N m at Mars to time series of solar flux at Earth and find that our hypothesis is satisfied in the three of them that used ionospheric data from the northern hemisphere. We define a solar flux proxy at Mars based upon the E 10.7 proxy for solar flux at Earth and use our best case study to derive an equation that relates N m to this proxy. We discuss how the ionosphere of Mars can be used to infer the presence of solar active regions not facing the Earth.
urth case study uses ionospheric observations from the southern hemisphere at latitudes where there are strong crustal magnetic anomalies. These profiles do not have Chapman-like shapes, unlike those of the other three case studies. We split this set of measurements into two subsets, corresponding to whether or not they were made at longitudes with strong crustal magnetic anomalies. Neither subset shows N m responding to changes in solar flux in the manner that we observe in the three other case studies.
d many similarities in ionospheric responses to short-term and long-term changes in solar flux for Venus, Earth, and Mars. We consider the implications of our results for different parametric equations that have been published describing this response.
Keywords
Mars , Ionosphere , Chapman theory , Solar flux , magnetic Fields
Journal title
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
Record number
2309277
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