Development of the mesospheric Na layer at 69 degrees N during the Geminids meteor shower 2010
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/5999Dato
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
The ECOMA sounding rocket campaign in 2010
was performed to investigate the charge state and number
density of meteoric smoke particles during the Geminids meteor
shower in December 2010. The ALOMAR Na lidar contributed
to the campaign with measurements of sodium number
density, temperature and line-of-sight wind between 80
and 110 km altitude over Andøya in northern Norway. This
paper investigates a possible connection between the Geminids
meteor shower and the mesospheric sodium layer. We
compare with data from a meteor radar and from a rocketborne
in situ particle instrument on three days. Our main
result is that the sodium column density is smaller during
the Geminids meteor shower than the winter average at the
same latitude. Moreover, during two of the three years considered,
the sodium column density decreased steadily during
these three weeks of the year. Both the observed decrease
of Na column density by 30% and of meteoric smoke
particle column density correlate well with a corresponding
decrease of sporadic meteor echoes. We found no correlation
between Geminids meteor flux rates and sodium column
density, nor between sporadic meteors and Na column density
(R = 0.25). In general, we found the Na column density
to be at very low values for winter, between 1.8 and
2.6×1013 m−2. We detected two meteor trails containing
sodium, on 13 December 2010 at 87.1 km and on 19 December
2010 at 84 km. From these meteor trails, we estimate a
global meteoric Na flux of 121 kg d−1 and a global total meteoric
influx of 20.2 t d−1.
Forlag
CopernicusSitering
Annales Geophysicae 31(2013) nr. 1 s. 61-73Metadata
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