41 research outputs found
Probing ionospheric structures using the LOFAR radio telescope
LOFAR is the LOw-Frequency Radio interferometer ARray located at midlatitude (52°53′N). Here we present results on ionospheric structures derived from 29 LOFAR nighttime observations during the winters of 2012/2013 and 2013/2014. We show that LOFAR is able to determine differential ionospheric total electron content values with an accuracy better than 0.001 total electron content unit = 1016m−2 over distances ranging between 1 and 100 km. For all observations the power law behavior of the phase structure function is confirmed over a long range of baseline lengths, between 1 and 80 km, with a slope that is, in general, larger than the 5/3 expected for pure Kolmogorov turbulence. The measured average slope is 1.89 with a one standard deviation spread of 0.1. The diffractive scale, i.e., the length scale where the phase variance is 1rad2, is shown to be an easily obtained single number that represents the ionospheric quality of a radio interferometric observation. A small diffractive scale is equivalent to high phase variability over the field of view as well as a short time coherence of the signal, which limits calibration and imaging quality. For the studied observations the diffractive scales at 150 MHz vary between 3.5 and 30 km. A diffractive scale above 5 km, pertinent to about 90% of the observations, is considered sufficient for the high dynamic range imaging needed for the LOFAR epoch of reionization project. For most nights the ionospheric irregularities were anisotropic, with the structures being aligned with the Earth magnetic field in about 60% of the observations
Formation of Large-Scale Semi-Organized Structures in Turbulent Convection
A new mean-field theory of turbulent convection is developed. This theory
predicts the convective wind instability in a shear-free turbulent convection
which causes formation of large-scale semi-organized fluid motions in the form
of cells or rolls. Spatial characteristics of these motions, such as the
minimum size of the growing perturbations and the size of perturbations with
the maximum growth rate, are determined. This study predicts also the existence
of the convective shear instability in a sheared turbulent convection which
results in generation of convective shear waves with a nonzero hydrodynamic
helicity. Increase of shear promotes excitation of the convective shear
instability. Applications of the obtained results to the atmospheric turbulent
convection and the laboratory experiments on turbulent convection are
discussed. This theory can be applied also for the describing a mesogranular
turbulent convection in astrophysics.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, REVTEX4, PHYSICAL REVIEW E, v. 67, in press
(2003