A case study of a sporadic sodium layer observed by the ALOMAR Weber Na lidar
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/2417Date
2008-05-28Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Rietveld, Michael T.; Nesse, H.; Heinrich, D.; Williams, B.; Hoppe, Ulf-Peter; Stadsnes, J.; Singer, W.; Blum, U.; Sandanger, M. I.; Trondsen, E.Abstract
Several possible mechanisms for the production of
sporadic sodium layers have been discussed in the literature,
but none of them seem to explain all the accumulated observations.
The hypotheses range from direct meteoric input,
to energetic electron bombardment on meteoric smoke particles,
to ion neutralization, to temperature dependent chemistry.
The varied instrumentation located on Andøya and near
Tromsø in Norway gives us an opportunity to test the different
theories applied to high latitude sporadic sodium layers.
We use the ALOMARWeber sodium lidar to monitor the appearance
and characteristics of a sporadic sodium layer that
was observed on 5 November 2005. We also monitor the
temperature to test the hypotheses regarding a temperature
dependent mechanism. The EISCAT Tromsø Dynasonde,
the ALOMAR/UiO All-sky camera and the SKiYMET meteor
radar on Andøya are used to test the suggested relationships
of sporadic sodium layers and sporadic E-layers, electron
precipitation, and meteor deposition during this event.
We find that more than one candidate is eligible to explain
our observation of the sporadic sodium layer.
Publisher
European Geosciences Union (EGU)Citation
Annales Geophysicae, 26, 1071–1081, 2008Metadata
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