Published 2023 | Version v1
Publication Open

Ionospheric–Thermospheric Responses to Geomagnetic Storms from Multi-Instrument Space Weather Data

  • 1. ROR icon Institute of Space Technology
  • 2. ROR icon Abdus Salam Centre for Physics
  • 3. ROR icon Institute of Geology and Geophysics

Description

We analyze vertical total electron content (vTEC) variations from the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) at different latitudes in different continents of the world during the geomagnetic storms of June 2015, August 2018, and November 2021. The resulting ionospheric perturbations at the low and mid-latitudes are investigated in terms of the prompt penetration electric field (PPEF), the equatorial electrojet (EEJ), and the magnetic H component from INTERMAGNET stations near the equator. East and Southeast Asia, Russia, and Oceania exhibited positive vTEC disturbances, while South American stations showed negative vTEC disturbances during all the storms. We also analyzed the vTEC from the Swarm satellites and found similar results to the retrieved vTEC data during the June 2015 and August 2018 storms. Moreover, we observed that ionospheric plasma tended to increase rapidly during the local afternoon in the main phase of the storms and has the opposite behavior at nighttime. The equatorial ionization anomaly (EIA) crest expansion to higher latitudes is driven by PPEF during daytime at the main and recovery phases of the storms. The magnetic H component exhibits longitudinal behavior along with the EEJ enhancement near the magnetic equator.

Files

2023Rasim.pdf

Files (8.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:6a21b8ef3f5f965be54b2c04a1bdc41e
8.0 MB Preview Download