dc.description.abstract | We have considered the effect that a local reduction
in the electron density (an electron bite-out), caused by
electron absorption on to dust particles, can have on the artificial
electron heating in the height region between 80 to
90 km, where noctilucent clouds (NLC) and the radar phenomenon
PMSE (Polar Mesospheric Summer Echoes) are
observed. With an electron density profile without biteouts,
the heated electron temperature Te,hot will generally
decrease smoothly with height in the PMSE region or there
may be no significant heating effect present. Within a biteout
Te,hot will decrease less rapidly and can even increase
slightly with height if the bite-out is strong. We have
looked at recent observations of PMSE which are affected
by artificial electron heating, with a heater cycling producing
the new overshoot effect. According to the theory for
the PMSE overshoot the fractional increase in electron temperature
Te,hot/Ti , where Ti is the unaffected ion temperature
= neutral temperature, can be found from the reduction
in PMSE intensity as the heater is switched on. We have
looked at results from four days of observations with the EISCAT
VHF radar (224MHz), together with the EISCAT heating
facility. We find support for the PMSE overshoot and
heating model from a sequence of observations during one
of the days where the heater transmitter power is varied from
cycle to cycle and where the calculated Te,hot/Ti is found to
vary in proportion to the transmitter power. We also looked
for signatures of electron bite-outs by examining the variation
of Te,hot/Ti with height for the three other days. We find
that the height variation of Te,hot/Ti is very different on the
three days. On one of the days we see typically that this ratio
can increase with height, showing the presence of a bite-out,
while on the next day the heating factor mainly decreases
with height, indicating that the fractional amount of dust is
low, so that the electron density is hardly affected by it. On
the third day there is little heating effect on the PMSE layer.
This is probably due to a sufficiently high electron density in the atmosphere below the PMSE layer, so that the transmitted
heater power is absorbed in these lower layers. On
this day the D-region, as given by the UHF (933MHz) observations,
extends deeper down in the atmosphere than on
the other two days, indicating that the degree of ionization in
and below the PMSE layers is higher as well. | en |