TY - JOUR
T1 - Climatology of the spread F over Roquetes, Spain
T2 - Impact of the medium scale traveling ionospheric disturbances
AU - Paul, Krishnendu Sekhar
AU - Haralambous, Haris
AU - Altadill, David
AU - Segarra, Antoni
AU - Navas-Portella, Víctor
AU - de Paula, Víctor
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© K. Paul et al., Published by EDP Sciences 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Understanding the long-term variability of nighttime Spread F (SF) and its drivers is crucial for improving the knowledge of ionospheric disturbances, which impact radio communication, GNSS positioning, and space weather forecasting. This study exploits the long-term ionogram dataset from the EB040 ionosonde in Spain (1955–2022) to investigate the climatology of nighttime SF and its dependence on solar activity. We analyze the diurnal, seasonal, and Solar-Cycle variability of both Range Spread F (RSF) and Frequency Spread F (FSF). The results reveal a strong inverse relationship between SF occurrence and solar activity, with SF maxima during solar minima. SF is confirmed as a predominantly nighttime phenomenon in western European mid-latitudes, primarily occurring between 20:00 and 05:00 UT, peaking near the solstices, with higher occurrence in June–July than in December–January, and with RSF accounting for 69% of SF events. Complementary analysis using GNSS-derived detrended Total Electron Content (d-TEC) and Rate of TEC index (ROTI) maps (2012–2016) quantifies the connection with Medium-Scale Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances (MSTIDs). Approximately 85% of SF occurrences at EB040 coincide with MSTID activity, with correlation coefficients above 0.96 between their onset times. MSTID activity exhibits the same seasonal pattern as SF, peaking at the solstices – particularly in June–July – and displaying the same inverse dependence on solar activity. Furthermore, 62% of RSF events at EB040 are associated with strong ROTI activity, especially during summer, and 83% of RSF events lasting over two hours correspond to strong ROTI activity. Overall, these findings highlight MSTIDs as the dominant electrodynamic driver of mid-latitude SF and underline the seasonal and solar activity dependencies of SF variability, providing new constraints for understanding ionospheric dynamics.
AB - Understanding the long-term variability of nighttime Spread F (SF) and its drivers is crucial for improving the knowledge of ionospheric disturbances, which impact radio communication, GNSS positioning, and space weather forecasting. This study exploits the long-term ionogram dataset from the EB040 ionosonde in Spain (1955–2022) to investigate the climatology of nighttime SF and its dependence on solar activity. We analyze the diurnal, seasonal, and Solar-Cycle variability of both Range Spread F (RSF) and Frequency Spread F (FSF). The results reveal a strong inverse relationship between SF occurrence and solar activity, with SF maxima during solar minima. SF is confirmed as a predominantly nighttime phenomenon in western European mid-latitudes, primarily occurring between 20:00 and 05:00 UT, peaking near the solstices, with higher occurrence in June–July than in December–January, and with RSF accounting for 69% of SF events. Complementary analysis using GNSS-derived detrended Total Electron Content (d-TEC) and Rate of TEC index (ROTI) maps (2012–2016) quantifies the connection with Medium-Scale Traveling Ionospheric Disturbances (MSTIDs). Approximately 85% of SF occurrences at EB040 coincide with MSTID activity, with correlation coefficients above 0.96 between their onset times. MSTID activity exhibits the same seasonal pattern as SF, peaking at the solstices – particularly in June–July – and displaying the same inverse dependence on solar activity. Furthermore, 62% of RSF events at EB040 are associated with strong ROTI activity, especially during summer, and 83% of RSF events lasting over two hours correspond to strong ROTI activity. Overall, these findings highlight MSTIDs as the dominant electrodynamic driver of mid-latitude SF and underline the seasonal and solar activity dependencies of SF variability, providing new constraints for understanding ionospheric dynamics.
KW - Mid-latitude ionosphere
KW - MSTIDs
KW - Spread F
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105022625420
U2 - 10.1051/swsc/2025046
DO - 10.1051/swsc/2025046
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105022625420
SN - 2115-7251
VL - 15
JO - Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate
JF - Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate
M1 - 49
ER -