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ABSTRACT The Earth's ionosphere plays a critical role in radio wave transmission, reflection, and scattering, directly affecting communication, navigation, and positioning systems. However, the comprehensive impacts of space weather remain to be fully established in cases where the ionosphere experiences strong disturbances during geomagnetic storms. We reported unprecedented observational evidence of extreme ionospheric electron density depletion and its hemispheric asymmetry during the May 10–12, 2024 super geomagnetic storm, utilizing multi-instrument ground-based and spaceborne in-situ observations. The ionospheric electron density significantly decreased, with a maximum reduction of 98% over the whole northern hemisphere for more than 2 days, causing backscatter echo failures in multiple ionosondes within the Chinese Meridian Project (CMP) monitoring network. In contrast, mid-to-low latitude regions in the southern hemisphere exhibited electron density enhancements. Thermosphere-Ionosphere-Electrodynamics General Circulation Model (TIEGCM) simulations demonstrated strong consistency with northern hemispheric observations. The vertical drift and the column integrated ratio of O and N2 (ΣO/N2) from observations and simulations indicated the deep reduction of total electron content (TEC) mainly generated by severe ion recombination associated with neutral composition changes that interacted with the disturbed electric field. The summer to winter neutral wind and asymmetry of O/N₂ were possibly responsible for the asymmetry in electron density between the northern and southern hemispheres. These results advance understanding of ionospheric storm physics by establishing causal links between magnetosphere-thermosphere coupling processes and extreme electron density variations, while providing critical observational constraints for space weather model refinement.more » « less
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Abstract The global 3‐dimensional structure of the concentric traveling ionospheric disturbances (CTIDs) triggered by 2022 Tonga volcano was reconstructed by using the 3‐dimensional computerized ionospheric tomography (3DCIT) technique and extensive global navigation satellite system (GNSS) observations. This study provides the first estimation of the CTIDs vertical wavelengths, ∼736 km, which was much larger than the gravity wave (GW) vertical wavelength, 240–400 km, estimated using ICON neutral wind observations. Notable trend with the variation of azimuth was also found in horizontal speeds at 200 and 500 km altitudes and differences between them. These results imply that (a) the global propagation of Lamb waves determined the arrival time of local ionospheric disturbances, and (b) the arriving Lamb waves caused vertical atmospheric perturbations that are not typical of GWs, resulting in local thermospheric horizontal wave propagation which is faster than the Lamb wave propagation at lower altitudes.more » « less
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Abstract This study investigates midlatitude ionospheric variations during the super geomagnetic storm on 10–11 May 2024, utilizing multi‐instrument data from ground‐based sources (Global Navigation Satellite Systems receivers and a Fabry–Perot Interferometer) and space‐based measurements (Swarm and DMSP). We observed several distinct density gradient structures in the midlatitude ionosphere, with the main findings summarized as follows: (a) Significant zonal plasma density enhancements developed continuously in local dusk across the American‐Pacific‐Asian longitude sectors around geomagnetic latitude. These midlatitude peaks exhibited a wide longitudinal extension exceeding 150 and a prolonged duration of 12–15 hr during the late main phase and early recovery phase of the storm. (b) Strong storm‐enhanced density (SED) was observed in both hemispheres yet with different longitudinal and universal time preferences. In the Northern Hemisphere, significant SED occurred over the American longitude sector during 20:30–22:30 UT on May 10. In the Southern Hemisphere, pronounced SED was observed not only in the American longitudes during 20:30–22:30 UT on May 10 but also in the Australian longitude sector during 02:00–04:00 UT on May 11.more » « less
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Abstract The storm‐enhanced density (SED) is a large‐scale midlatitude ionospheric electron density enhancement in the local afternoon sector, which exhibits substantial spatial gradients and thus can impose detrimental effects on modern navigation and communication systems, causing potential space weather hazards. This study has identified a comprehensive list of 49 SED events over the continental US and adjacent regions, by examining strong geomagnetic storms occurring between 2000 and 2023. The ground‐based Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) total electron content and data from a new TEC‐based ionospheric data assimilation system were used to analyze the characteristics of SED. For each derived SED events, we have quantified its morphology by employing a Gaussian function to parameterize key characteristics of the SED, such as the plume intensity, central longitude, and half‐width. A statistical analysis of SEDs was conducted for the first time to characterize their climatological features. We found that the SED distribution exhibits a higher peak intensity and a narrower width as geomagnetic activity strengthens. The peak intensity of SED has maximum values around the equinoxes in their seasonal distribution. Additionally, we observed a solar cycle dependence in the SED distribution, with more events occurring during the solar maximum and declining phases compared to the solar minimum. SED plumes exhibit a sub‐corotation feature with respect to the Earth, characterized by a westward drift speed between 50 and 400 m/s and a duration of 3–10 hr. These information advanced the current understanding of the spatial‐temporal variation of SED characteristics.more » « less
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Abstract This paper conducts a multi‐instrument and data assimilation analysis of the three‐dimensional ionospheric electron density responses to the total solar eclipse on 08 April 2024. The altitude‐resolved electron density variations over the continental US and adjacent regions are analyzed using the Millstone Hill incoherent scatter radar data, ionosonde observations, Swarm in situ measurements, and a novel TEC‐based ionospheric data assimilation system (TIDAS) with SAMI3 model as the background. The principal findings are summarized as follows: (a) The ionospheric hmF2 exhibited a slight enhancement in the initial phase of the eclipse, followed by a distinct reduction of 20–30 km in the recovery phase of the eclipse. The hmF2 in the umbra region showed a post‐eclipse fluctuation, characterized by wavelike perturbations of 10–25 km in magnitude and a period of 30 min. (b) There was a substantial reduction in ionospheric electron density of 20%–50% during the eclipse, with the maximum depletion observed in the F‐region around 200–250 km. The ionospheric electron density variation exhibited a significant altitude‐dependent feature, wherein the response time gradually delayed with increasing altitude. (c) The bottomside ionospheric electron density displayed an immediate reduction after local eclipse began, reaching maximum depletion 5–10 min after the maximum obscuration. In contrast, the topside ionospheric electron density showed a significantly delayed response, with maximum depletion occurring 1–2.5 hr after the peak obscuration.more » « less
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Abstract This study has developed a new TEC‐based ionospheric data assimilation system for 3‐D regional ionospheric imaging over the South American sector (TIDAS‐SA) (45°S–15°N, 35°–85°W, and 100–800 km). The TIDAS‐SA data assimilation system utilizes a hybrid Ensemble‐Variational approach to incorporate a diverse set of ionospheric data sources, including dense ground‐based Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) line‐of‐sight Total Electron Content (TEC) data, radio occultation data from the Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere, and Climate‐2 (COSMIC‐2), and altimeter TEC data from the JASON‐3 satellite. TIDAS‐SA can produce a reanalyzed three‐dimensional (3‐D) electron density spatial variation with a high time cadence, yielding spatial‐temporal resolution of 1° (latitude) × 1° (longitude) × 20 km (altitude) × 5 min. This allows us to reconstruct and study the 3‐D ionospheric morphology with multi‐scale structures. The performance of the data assimilation system is validated against independent ionosonde and in situ measurements through an experiment for a strong geomagnetic storm event on 03–04 November 2021. The results demonstrate that TIDAS‐SA can provide detailed and altitude‐resolved information that accurately characterizes the storm‐time ionospheric disturbances in vertical and horizontal domains over the equatorial and low‐latitude regions of South America.more » « less
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Abstract This study investigates the ionospheric total electron content (TEC) responses in the 2‐D spatial domain and electron density variations in the 3‐D spatial domain during the annular solar eclipse on 14 October 2023, using ground‐based Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) observations, a novel TEC‐based ionospheric data assimilation system (TIDAS), ionosonde measurements, and satellite in situ data. The main results are summarized as follows: (a) The 2‐D TEC responses exhibited distinct latitudinal differences. The mid‐latitude ionosphere exhibited a more substantial TEC decrease of 25%–40% along with an extended recovery time of 3–4 hr. In contrast, the equatorial and low‐latitude ionosphere experienced a smaller TEC reduction of 10%–25% and a faster recovery time of 20–50 min. The minimal eclipse effect was observed near the northern equatorial ionization anomaly crest region. (b) The ionospheric electron density variations during the eclipse were effectively reconstructed by TIDAS data assimilation in the 3‐D domain, providing important altitude information with validity. (c) The ionospheric electron density variations showed a notable altitude‐dependent feature. The eclipse led to a substantial electron density reduction of 30%–50%, with the maximum depletion occurring around the ionospheric F2‐layer peak height (hmF2) of 250–350 km. The post‐eclipse recovery of electron density exhibited a relatively slower pace near the F2‐layer peak height than that at lower and higher altitudes.more » « less
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Abstract This paper investigates the midlatitude ionospheric disturbances over the American/Atlantic longitude sector during an intense geomagnetic storm on 23 April 2023. The study utilized a combination of ground‐based observations (Global Navigation Satellite System total electron content and ionosonde) along with measurements from multiple satellite missions (GOLD, Swarm, Defense Meteorological Satellite Program, and TIMED/GUVI) to analyze storm‐time electrodynamics and neutral dynamics. We found that the storm main phase was characterized by distinct midlatitude ionospheric density gradient structures as follows: (a) In the European‐Atlantic longitude sector, a significant midlatitude bubble‐like ionospheric super‐depletion structure (BLISS) was observed after sunset. This BLISS appeared as a low‐density channel extending poleward/westward and reached ∼40° geomagnetic latitude, corresponding to an APEX height of ∼5,000 km. (b) Coincident with the BLISS, a dynamic storm‐enhanced density plume rapidly formed and decayed at local afternoon in the North American sector, with the plume intensity being doubled and halved in just a few hours. (c) The simultaneous occurrence of these strong yet opposite midlatitude gradient structures could be mainly attributed to common key drivers of prompt penetration electric fields and subauroral polarization stream electric fields. This shed light on the important role of storm‐time electrodynamic processes in shaping global ionospheric disturbances.more » « less
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Abstract This paper conducts a multi‐instrument analysis and data assimilation study of midlatitude ionospheric disturbances over the European and North American longitude sectors during a strong geomagnetic storm on 26–28 February 2023. The study uses a set of ground‐based (GNSS receivers, ionosondes) observations, space‐borne (DMSP, GOLD) measurements, and a new TEC‐based ionospheric data assimilation system (TIDAS). We observed a series of distinct storm‐time features with regard to storm‐enhanced density (SED) and subauroral polarization stream (SAPS) as follows: (a) Under multiple ring current intensifications, the storm‐time subauroral ionosphere produced long‐lasting duskside SAPS for ∼36 hr along with considerable dawnside SAPS for several hours. (b) Associated with long‐lived SAPS, strong SED occurred consecutively in the European longitude sector near local noon during a positive ionospheric storm and later in the North American longitude sector near local dusk during a negative ionospheric storm. (c) The 3‐D morphology of SED in multiple longitude sectors was reconstructed using TIDAS data assimilation technique with fine‐scale details, which revealed a narrow ionospheric plasma channel with electron density enhancement and layer uplift.more » « less
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This paper studies the three-dimensional (3-D) ionospheric electron density variation over the continental US and adjacent regions during the August 2017 Great American Solar Eclipse event, using Millstone Hill incoherent scatter radar observations, ionosonde data, the Swarm satellite measurements, and a new TEC-based ionospheric data assimilation system (TIDAS). The TIDAS data assimilation system can reconstruct a 3-D electron density distribution over continental US and adjacent regions, with a spatial–temporal resolution of 1∘× 1∘ in latitude and longitude, 20 km in altitude, and 5 min in universal time. The combination of multi-instrumental observations and the high-resolution TIDAS data assimilation products can well represent the dynamic 3-D ionospheric electron density response to the solar eclipse, providing important altitude information and fine-scale details. Results show that the eclipse-induced ionospheric electron density depletion can exceed 50% around the F2-layer peak height between 200 and 300 km. The recovery of electron density following the maximum depletion exhibits an altitude-dependent feature, with lower altitudes exhibiting a faster recovery than the F2 peak region and above. The recovery feature was also characterized by a post-eclipse electron density enhancement of 15–30%, which is particularly prominent in the topside ionosphere at altitudes above 300 km.more » « less
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