Articles | Volume 30, issue 3
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-30-613-2012
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-30-613-2012
Regular paper
 | 
27 Mar 2012
Regular paper |  | 27 Mar 2012

Equinoctial asymmetry in solar activity variations of NmF2 and TEC

Y. Chen, L. Liu, W. Wan, and Z. Ren

Abstract. The ionosonde NmF2 data (covering several solar cycles) and the JPL TEC maps (from 1998 through 2009) were collected to investigate the equinoctial asymmetries in ionospheric electron density and its variation with solar activity. With solar activity increasing, the equinoctial asymmetry of noontime NmF2 increases at middle latitudes but decreases or changes little at low latitudes, while the equinoctial asymmetry of TEC increases at all latitudes. The latitudinal feature of the equinoctial asymmetry at high solar activity is different from that at low solar activity. The increases of NmF2 and TEC with the solar proxy P = (F10.7+F10.7A)/2 also show equinoctial asymmetries that depend on latitudes. The increase rate of NmF2 with P at March equinox (ME) is higher than that at September equinox (SE) at middle latitudes, but the latter is higher than the former at the EIA crest latitudes, and the difference between them is small at the EIA trough latitudes. The phenomenon of higher increase rate at SE than at ME does not appear in TEC. The increase rate of noontime TEC with P at ME is higher than that at SE at all latitudes, and the difference between them peaks at both sides of dip equator. It is mentionable that the equinoctial asymmetries of NmF2 and TEC increase rates present some longitudinal dependence at low latitude. The influences of equinoctial differences in the thermosphere and ionospheric dynamics processes on the equinoctial asymmetry of the electron density were briefly discussed.

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