Articles | Volume 13, issue 6
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-13-3023-2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-13-3023-2020
Research article
 | 
09 Jun 2020
Research article |  | 09 Jun 2020

First observations of the McMurdo–South Pole oblique ionospheric HF channel

Alex T. Chartier, Juha Vierinen, and Geonhwa Jee

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Cited articles

Bostan, S. M., Urbina, J., Mathews, J. D., Bilén, S. G., and Breakall, J. K.: An HF software-defined radar to study the ionosphere, Radio Sci., 54, 839–849, https://doi.org/10.1029/2018RS006773, 2019. 
Breit, G. and Tuve, M. A.: A radio method of estimating the height of the conducting layer, Nature, 116, 357–357, 1925. 
Budden, K. G.: Radio Waves in the Ionosphere, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1961. 
Bullett, T., Jee, G., Livingston, R., Kim, J. H., Zabotin, N., Lee, C. S., Mabie, J., and Kwon, H. J.: Jang Bogo Antarctic Ionosonde, EGU General Assembly, Vienna, Austria, 17–22 April 2016, EGU2016-10776, 2016. 
Bust, G. S., Cook, J. A., Kronschnabl, G. R., Vasicek, C. J., and Ward, S. B.: Application of ionospheric tomography to single-site location range estimation, Int. J. Imag. Syst. Tech., 5, 160–168, 1994. 
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Short summary
A novel oblique ionospheric radio sounder has been developed and demonstrated in Antarctica. The transmitter was located at McMurdo and the receiver at the South Pole (1356 km great-circle path). The system cycled through 12 frequencies each minute and recorded signal time of flight, intensity, and Doppler. This allowed for the estimation of peak ionospheric electron density, which validated well against independent data from the nearby Jang Bogo ionosonde and GPS TEC.