13,688 research outputs found

    The diurnal heat budget of the thermosphere

    Get PDF
    Detailed numerical calculations of thermospheric heat sources and sinks are presented and their relative importance is discussed in reference to the energy balance phenomena of the neutral atmosphere. It is shown that the thermal energy available from the absorption in the Schumann-Runge continuum leading to photodissociation of O2 is by far the largest energy source in the lower thermosphere. Other sources of varying importance in different altitude ranges are: (1) energy from photoelectrons, (2) energy exchange from thermal plasma, (3) chemical reactions (ion-electron dissociative recombination) energy gain, and (4) kinetic and dissipative energy associated with the neutral wind. The energy sinks of importance are thermal conduction at the lower boundary (120 km) and radiative cooling of atomic oxygen. It is shown that the combined energy from processes 2 to 4 constitute only a small fraction of the total energy available from photoelectrons and are in phase with the latter. It is suggested that a choice of a lower boundary much below 120 km, e.g. near the mesopause level (90 km), should be more appropriate for general thermospheric studies

    Multi-frequency scatter broadening evolution of pulsars - I

    Full text link
    We present multi-wavelength scatter broadening observations of 47 pulsars, made with the Giant Metre-wave Radio Telescope (GMRT), Ooty Radio Telescope (ORT) and Long Wavelength Array (LWA). The GMRT observations have been made in the phased array mode at 148, 234, and 610 MHz and the ORT observations at 327 MHz. The LWA data sets have been obtained from the LWA pulsar data archive. The broadening of each pulsar as a function of observing frequency provides the frequency scaling index, α\alpha. The estimations of α\alpha have been obtained for 39 pulsars, which include entirely new estimates for 31 pulsars. This study increases the total sample of pulsars available with α\alpha estimates by ∼\sim50\%. The overall distribution of α\alpha with the dispersion measure (DM) of pulsar shows interesting variations, which are consistent with the earlier studies. However, for a given value of DM a range of α\alpha values are observed, indicating the characteristic turbulence along each line of sight. For each pulsar, the estimated level of turbulence, Cne2C^{2}_{n_e}, has also been compared with α\alpha and DM. Additionally, we compare the distribution of α\alpha with the theoretically predicated model to infer the general characteristics of the ionized interstellar medium (ISM). Nearly 65\% of the pulsars show a flatter index (i.e., α<4.4\alpha < 4.4) than that is expected from the Kolmogorov turbulence model. Moreover, the group of pulsars having flatter index is typically associated with an enhanced value of Cne2C^{2}_{n_e} than those with steeper index.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
    • …
    corecore