Sudden ionospheric disturbance


A sudden ionospheric disturbance is any one of several ionospheric perturbations, resulting from abnormally high ionization/plasma density in the D region of the ionosphere and caused by a solar flare and/or solar particle event. The SID results in a sudden increase in radio-wave absorption that is most severe in the upper medium frequency and lower high frequency ranges, and as a result often interrupts or interferes with telecommunications systems.

Discovery

The Dellinger effect, or sometimes Mögel–Dellinger effect, is another name for a sudden ionospheric disturbance. The effect was discovered by John Howard Dellinger around 1935 and also described by the German physicist Hans Mögel in 1930. The fadeouts are characterized by sudden onset and a recovery that takes minutes or hours.

Cause

When a solar flare occurs on the Sun a blast of intense ultraviolet and x-ray radiation hits the dayside of the Earth after a propagation time of about 8 minutes. This high energy radiation is absorbed by atmospheric particles, raising them to excited states and knocking electrons free in the process of photoionization. The low altitude ionospheric layers immediately increase in density over the entire dayside. The ionospheric disturbance enhances VLF radio propagation. Scientists on the ground can use this enhancement to detect solar flares; by monitoring the signal strength of a distant VLF transmitter, sudden ionospheric disturbances are recorded and indicate when solar flares have taken place. The small geomagnetic effect in the lower ionosphere appears as a small hook on magnetic records and is therefore called "geomagnetic crochet effect" or "sudden field effect".

Effects on radio waves

Short wave radio waves are absorbed by the increased particles in the low altitude ionosphere causing a complete blackout of radio communications. This is called a short wave fadeout. These fadeouts last for a few minutes to a few hours and are most severe in the equatorial regions where the Sun is most directly overhead. The ionospheric disturbance enhances long wave radio propagation. SIDs are observed and recorded by monitoring the signal strength of a distant VLF transmitter.
A whole array of sub-classes of SIDs exist, detectable by different techniques at various wavelengths: the short-wave fadeout, the SPA, SFD, SCNA, SEA, etc.