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Solar Xrays Oscillate D Layer Ionosphere

Discussion in 'Amateur Radio News' started by KQ6XA, Nov 17, 2017.

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  1. KQ6XA

    KQ6XA Ham Member QRZ Page

    A team of scientists led by solar physicist Laura Hayes, investigated a connection between solar flares and Earth's ionosphere. They discovered oscillating pulses in the D layer of the ionosphere at Low Frequency [transatlantic propagation at 24 kHz LF] mirrored X-ray and Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) oscillations during a July 24, 2016 flare. It has now become clear that solar flares exhibit quasi-periodic pulsations with timescales of minutes at X-ray energies; it had not been previously known that the ionosphere is sensitive to this variability. Their results reveal that the Earth's ionosphere is more sensitive to small-scale changes in solar soft X-ray flux than previously thought. Modeling of the ionosphere shows that the D region electron density varies by up to an order of magnitude over the timescale of the pulsations (approximately 20 minutes). Their research article appears in Space Physics, The Journal of Geophysical Research.
    [​IMG]
    Solar Physicist Laura Hayes

    NASA Detects Solar Flare Pulses at Sun and Earth
    When our Sun erupts with giant explosions — such as bursts of radiation called solar flares — we know they can affect space throughout the solar system as well as near Earth. But monitoring their effects requires having observatories in many places with many perspectives, much the way weather sensors all over Earth can help us monitor what’s happening with a terrestrial storm.
    [​IMG]
    NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory captured these images of an X-class flare on Feb. 15, 2011.
    Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/SDO

    By using multiple observatories, two recent studies show how solar flares exhibit pulses or oscillations in the amount of energy being sent out. Such research provides new insights on the origins of these massive solar flares as well as the space weather they produce, which is key information as humans and robotic missions venture out into the solar system, farther and farther from home.



    The first study spotted oscillations during a flare — unexpectedly — in measurements of the Sun’s total output of extreme ultraviolet energy, a type of light invisible to human eyes. On Feb. 15, 2011, the Sun emitted an X-class solar flare, the most powerful kind of these intense bursts of radiation. Because scientists had multiple instruments observing the event, they were able to track oscillations in the flare’s radiation, happening simultaneously in several different sets of observations.

    “Any type of oscillation on the Sun can tell us a lot about the environment the oscillations are taking place in, or about the physical mechanism responsible for driving changes in emission,” said Ryan Milligan, lead author of this first study and solar physicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and the University of Glasgow in Scotland. In this case, the regular pulses of extreme ultraviolet light indicated disturbances — akin to earthquakes — were rippling through the chromosphere, the base of the Sun’s outer atmosphere, during the flare.

    What surprised Milligan about the oscillations was the fact that they were first observed in extreme ultraviolet data from NOAA’s GOES — short for Geostationary Operation Environmental Satellite, which resides in near-Earth space. The mission studies the Sun from Earth’s perspective, collecting X-ray and extreme ultraviolet irradiance data — the total amount of the Sun’s energy that reaches Earth’s atmosphere over time.

    This wasn’t a typical data set for Milligan. While GOES helps monitor the effects of solar eruptions in Earth’s space environment — known collectively as space weather — the satellite wasn’t initially designed to detect fine details like these oscillations.

    When studying solar flares, Milligan more commonly uses high-resolution data on a specific active region in the Sun’s atmosphere to study the physical processes underlying flares. This is often necessary in order to zoom in on events in a particular area — otherwise they can easily be lost against the backdrop of the Sun’s constant, intense radiation.

    “Flares themselves are very localized, so for the oscillations to be detected above the background noise of the Sun’s regular emissions and show up in the irradiance data was very striking,” Milligan said.

    There have been previous reports of oscillations in GOES X-ray data coming from the Sun’s upper atmosphere, called the corona, during solar flares. What’s unique in this case is that the pulses were observed in extreme ultraviolet emission at frequencies that show they originated lower, in the chromosphere, providing more information about how a flare’s energy travels throughout through the Sun’s atmosphere.

    To be sure the oscillations were real, Milligan and his colleagues checked corresponding data from other Sun-observing instruments on board NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory or SDO, for short: one that also collects extreme ultraviolet irradiance data and another that images the corona in different wavelengths of light. They found the exact same pulses in those data sets, confirming they were a phenomenon with its source at the Sun. Their findings are summarized in a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters on Oct. 9, 2017.

    These oscillations interest the scientists because they may be the result of a mechanism by which flares emit energy into space — a process we don’t yet fully understand. Additionally, the fact that the oscillations appeared in data sets typically used to monitor larger space patterns suggests they could play a role in driving space weather effects.

    In the second study, scientists investigated a connection between solar flares and activity in Earth’s atmosphere. The team discovered that pulses in the electrified layer of the atmosphere — called the ionosphere — mirrored X-ray oscillations during a July 24, 2016, C-class flare. C-class flares are of mid-to-low intensity, and about 100 times weaker than X-flares.

    Stretching from roughly 30 to 600 miles above Earth’s surface, the ionosphere is an ever-changing region of the atmosphere that reacts to changes from both Earth below and space above. It swells in response to incoming solar radiation, which ionizes atmospheric gases, and relaxes at night as the charged particles gradually recombine.

    In particular, the team of scientists — led by Laura Hayes, a solar physicist who splits her time between NASA Goddard and Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, and her thesis adviser Peter Gallagher — looked at how the lowest layer of the ionosphere, called the D-region, responded to pulsations in a solar flare.

    “This is the region of the ionosphere that affects high-frequency communications and navigation signals,” Hayes said. “Signals travel through the D-region, and changes in the electron density affect whether the signal is absorbed, or degraded.”

    The scientists used data from very low frequency, or VLF, radio signals to probe the flare’s effects on the D-region. These were standard communication signals transmitted from Maine and received in Ireland. The denser the ionosphere, the more likely these signals are to run into charged particles along their way from a signal transmitter to its receiver. By monitoring how the VLF signals propagate from one end to the other, scientists can map out changes in electron density.

    Pooling together the VLF data and X-ray and extreme ultraviolet observations from GOES and SDO, the team found the D-region’s electron density was pulsing in concert with X-ray pulses on the Sun. They published their results in the Journal of Geophysical Research on Oct. 17, 2017.

    “X-rays impinge on the ionosphere and because the amount of X-ray radiation coming in is changing, the amount of ionization in the ionosphere changes too,” said Jack Ireland, a co-author on both studies and Goddard solar physicist. “We’ve seen X-ray oscillations before, but the oscillating ionosphere response hasn’t been detected in the past.”

    Hayes and her colleagues used a model to determine just how much the electron density changed during the flare. In response to incoming radiation, they found the density increased as much as 100 times in just 20 minutes during the pulses — an exciting observation for the scientists who didn’t expect oscillating signals in a flare would have such a noticeable effect in the ionosphere. With further study, the team hopes to understand how the ionosphere responds to X-ray oscillations at different timescales, and whether other solar flares induce this response.

    “This is an exciting result, showing Earth’s atmosphere is more closely linked to solar X-ray variability than previously thought,” Hayes said. “Now we plan to further explore this dynamic relationship between the Sun and Earth’s atmosphere.”

    Both of these studies took advantage of the fact that we are increasingly able to track solar activity and space weather from a number of vantage points. Understanding the space weather that affects us at Earth requires understanding a dynamic system that stretches from the Sun all the way to our upper atmosphere — a system that can only be understood by tapping into a wide range of missions scattered throughout space.

    Article Source NASA Press Release: By Lina Tran
    NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
    Last Updated: Nov. 16, 2017 , Editor: Rob Garner

    Paper:
    • [​IMG]
    Research Article
    Pulsations in the Earth's Lower Ionosphere Synchronized With Solar Flare Emission
    Authors
    Laura A. Hayes,
    Peter T. Gallagher,
    Joseph McCauley,
    Brian R. Dennis,
    Jack Ireland,
    Andrew Inglis

    First published: 17 October 2017
    DOI: 10.1002/2017JA024647

    Abstract
    Solar flare emission at X-ray and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) energies can cause substantial enhancements in the electron density in the Earth's lower ionosphere. It has now become clear that flares exhibit quasi-periodic pulsations with timescales of minutes at X-ray energies, but to date, it has not been known if the ionosphere is sensitive to this variability. Here using a combination of very low frequency (24 kHz) measurement together with space-based X-ray and EUV observations, we report pulsations of the ionospheric D region, which are synchronized with a set of pulsating flare loops. Modeling of the ionosphere show that the D region electron density varies by up to an order of magnitude over the timescale of the pulsations (∼ 20 min). Our results reveal that the Earth's ionosphere is more sensitive to small-scale changes in solar soft X-ray flux than previously thought and implies that planetary ionospheres are closely coupled to small-scale changes in solar/stellar activity.
     
    Last edited: Nov 17, 2017
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  2. W0PV

    W0PV Ham Member QRZ Page

    Very interesting Bonnie, thanks. May be useful for, and for them to study, hams on 2200m/630m now too.

    So they were doing one-way trans-Atlantic DX on 24 Khz. "The scientists used data from very low frequency, or VLF, radio signals to probe the flare’s effects on the D-region. These were standard communication signals transmitted from Maine and received in Ireland. "

    Would be fun to know more about the 24 Khz xmiting / rcving facilities and equipment. Probably the USN VLF station NAA . See wiki link below. Wonder what was used in EI-land.

    I especially like Laura Hayes retweet that restated the headline as "More accurately, “Irish Scientists Working with NASA Detect Solar Flare Pulses at Sun and Earth”" ;)

    73 de John - WØPV - proud to be 1/4 Irish, the most lovably clever fraction :cool:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VLF_Transmitter_Cutler
     
    Last edited: Nov 17, 2017
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  3. KQ6XA

    KQ6XA Ham Member QRZ Page

    Somehow this article appeared in the QRZ.com News section but not on the front page.
     
    Last edited: Nov 18, 2017
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  4. W0PV

    W0PV Ham Member QRZ Page

    Bonnie, I share your frustration. It seems to take quite awhile for new posts to show up on the front page.

    I've noticed that since the change of QRZ.COM front page format and policies. first there is a delay for moderation to approve a new News post before it goes live, often over a day, and then there is another delay, sometimes several days, before it transfers to the front page. A far cry from the usual modern 24 hours news cycle.

    I'm still so disgusted with the crammed and overly busy graphic format changes and emphasis on YouTube like vids and podcasts that I rarely even look at the Zed Home front page anymore. I just go to the forum listings.

    73, John, WØPV
     
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  5. KQ6XA

    KQ6XA Ham Member QRZ Page

    It is quite a fascinating discovery by Laura Hayes and her team, that the D-layer can be modulated so quickly by solar x-rays... and probably also by other solar radiation. It certainly may help explain the variability that hams experience all the time with fading "QSB" in the ionosphere.

    Also, they found "oscillations" during solar flares. It's as if the whole sun is being plucked like a musical instrument. Twaaaang! Order among chaos.
     
    Last edited: Nov 18, 2017
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  6. W1YW

    W1YW Ham Member QRZ Page

    D REGION Bonnie; not LAYER :)

    Yes, Danilov's book shows the reaction rate for the dominant NOx chemical reactions is capable of manifesting rapid changes. It's cool that we see it demonstrated 45 years later:)
     
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  7. W1YW

    W1YW Ham Member QRZ Page

    Yep. Happens all the time. So I stopped submitting news.

    The 'Amateur Radio News' is really a kind of ham 'Youtube' nowadays...the ARRL.ORG page OTOH seems to have picked up the slack with real news.
     
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  8. KF7WIS

    KF7WIS QRZ CEO QRZ HQ Staff Volunteer Moderator Platinum Subscriber QRZ Page

    Hi there John,
    I just wanted to thank you for your feedback and tell you that we do appreciate your comments and your use of the site. We will review our moderation procedures to ensure a smoother transition from submission to posting.
    Thanks again and 73
    Jaime Jeffries, KF7WIS
    CEO, QRZ.com
     
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  9. KF7WIS

    KF7WIS QRZ CEO QRZ HQ Staff Volunteer Moderator Platinum Subscriber QRZ Page

    Bonnie,
    Thanks for your observation and our apologies for the oversight. As I told John, we will review our procedures. Thanks for using QRZ
    73
    Jaime Jeffries, KF7WIS
    CEO, QRZ.com
     
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  10. W0PV

    W0PV Ham Member QRZ Page

    Hi Jaime, thanks for your reply and pending action. A very nice touch.

    FYI, although I have been a loyal Zedder, increasingly for news (and to avoid the often tedious vids / podcasts) I have also been turning to the ARRL, or lately, the obvious knock-off, QRZ Now.

    The latter seems to be a more simple aggregator and pulls together news from multiple sources with IMO a more eye-pleasing graphic layout. Although both alternatives, so far, do not enable comments or a forum style, which of course is a great strength of the Zed.

    73, John, WØPV
     
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  11. KF7WIS

    KF7WIS QRZ CEO QRZ HQ Staff Volunteer Moderator Platinum Subscriber QRZ Page

    John,
    I like to think that one of QRZ's strengths is that we are always evolving and changing. Your comments certainly do not fall on deaf ears. We recently began labeling the content on the homepage with designators like "QRZ News," "Podcast" or "Video." This is our attempt to help you separate "grain from chaff." But, if you'll excuse the excessive metaphors, one man's grain is another's chaff. The podcasts and videos posted on the homepage, while they don't seem to resonate with you, are currently some of our more popular items. We'll do our best to use all the feedback we receive to make QRZ's homepage as widely appealing as possible while also focusing on other popular utilities of the site such as our database and logbook.
    While I'm a big fan of the ARRL's mission, work , and website, I am going to refrain from commenting on the other site you mentioned. Let's keep things classy ;)
    73
    Jaime, KF7WIS
     
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  12. W1YW

    W1YW Ham Member QRZ Page

    Yes, separating bona fide "NEWS" from videos and pods is great. Or, you can do what CNN does now: the 'cable NEWS network' no longer calls ANY of their pieces "NEWS". They call them "STORIES".

    It's a shame that QRZed no longer is a 'first pass' source of news for amateur radio. But clearly there are better sources for 'amateur radio news' now.

    Why not relegate real 'news' to a not-up-front section? Call the main page stuff, for example, FOCUS or some other non-news noun.

    If the viewer target has changed, why not pull the curtain back a bit and tell us what you are after? Informing? Entertaining? Techs? HF Ops? Emcomms? Clearly W0PV is not the only one with questions on this. What is it you are evolving towards?

    73
    Chip W1YW
     
    Last edited: Nov 20, 2017
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  13. KL7AJ

    KL7AJ Ham Member QRZ Page

    Some of these oscillations can sound like "60 hz" noise.....often heard up here in the Arctic....with no previous explanation....since they're heard by hams in the bush hundreds of miles from any commercial AC power. This answers a lot of mysteries we've seen for a while.
     
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  14. W1YW

    W1YW Ham Member QRZ Page

    You bet. Just look chemically at the related rates:) Things get funky in near vacuo with flash lamps:) There is little collisional broadening to suppress oscillatory modes. Its like pouring liquid oxygen on a BBQ;-)
     
    Last edited: Nov 20, 2017
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  15. G3SEA

    G3SEA Ham Member QRZ Page

    Cool ! :)

    I'll send this to the University of Hawaii Solar Physicists atop
    Haleakala on Maui.
    G3SEA/KH6
     
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