Super Dual Auroral Radar Network


The Super Dual Auroral Radar Network is an international scientific radar network
consisting of 35
high frequency radars located in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. SuperDARN radars are primarily used to map high-latitude plasma convection in the F region of the ionosphere, but the radars are also used to study a wider range of geospace phenomena including field aligned currents, magnetic reconnection, geomagnetic storms and substorms, magnetospheric MHD waves, mesospheric winds via meteor ionization trails, and interhemispheric plasma convection asymmetries. The SuperDARN collaboration is composed of radars operated by JHU/APL, Virginia Tech, Dartmouth College, the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, the Institute of Space and Atmospheric Studies at the University of Saskatchewan, the University of Leicester, Lancaster University, La Trobe University, and the Solar-Terrestrial Environment Laboratory at Nagoya University.

History

In the 1970s and 1980s, the Scandinavian Twin Auroral Radar Experiment very high frequency coherent scatter radars were used to study field aligned E region ionospheric irregularities. Using two radars with overlapping fields of view, it was possible to determine the 2D velocity vector of E region ionospheric plasma flow. However, irregularities were only observed when the radar wavevector was perpendicular to the magnetic field in the scattering region.
This meant that there was a problem with operating at VHF since VHF frequencies don't allow for very much refraction of the transmitted radar wave vector; thus, the perpendicularity requirement could not be easily met at high latitudes. At HF frequencies, however, refraction of the radar wavevector is greater, and this allows for the perpendicularity requirement to be met at high latitudes. Refraction of radio waves in the ionosphere is a complicated non-linear phenomenon governed by the Appleton–Hartree equation.
In 1983, a steerable-beam HF radar with 16 log-periodic antennas began operations at Goose Bay, Labrador, Canada. Comparing measurements of F region ionopheric plasma velocity from the Goose Bay radar with the Sondestrom Incoherent Scatter Radar revealed that the Goose Bay radar was capable of measuring the F region plasma convection velocity. A magnetically conjugate radar was constructed in Antarctica at Halley Research Station in 1988 as part of the Polar Anglo–American Conjugate Experiment. PACE provided simultaneous conjugate studies of ionospheric and magnetospheric phenomena.
From PACE, which was only able to determine a single component of the 2D ionospheric velocity, it became apparent that determining the 2D ionospheric velocity would be advantageous. Combining velocity measurements from Goose Bay with a second coherent-scatter radar in Schefferville in 1989 allowed for a 2D determination of the F region ionospheric velocity.
This work led to SuperDARN, a network of HF radars with pairs of radars having overlapping fields of view. This arrangement allowed for the determination of the full 2D ionospheric plasma convection velocity. Due to the advancement of data assimilation models, radars recently added to the network do not necessarily have overlapping fields of view. Using data from all SuperDARN radars in the northern or southern hemisphere, an ionospheric plasma convection pattern—a map of high-latitude plasma velocity at F region altitudes —can be determined.

Primary Goals

The primary goals of SuperDARN are to determine or study:
SuperDARN radars operate in the HF band between 8.0 MHz and 22.0 MHz. In the standard operating mode each radar scans through 16 beams of azimuthal separation of ~3.24°, with a scan taking 1 min to complete.
Each beam is divided into 75 range gates each 45 km in distance, and so in each full scan the radars each cover 52° in azimuth and over 3000 km in range; an area encompassing the order of 1 million square km.
The radars measure the Doppler velocity of plasma density irregularities in the ionosphere.
Since Linux became popular, it has become the default operating system for the SuperDARN network. The operating system.

SuperDARN sites

The following is a list of SuperDARN sites, based on a list maintained by Virginia Tech College of Engineering. As of 2009, an expansion project was underway for expanding the network into the middle latitudes, including the addition of sites in Hays, Kansas, Oregon, and the Azores, in order to support mapping outside of the auroral regions during large magnetic storms.
*: Part of the Southern Hemisphere Auroral Radar Experiment

Coverage

Northern Hemisphere
Southern Hemisphere
Each year the SuperDARN scientific community gather to discuss SuperDARN science, operations, hardware, software and other SuperDARN related issues. Traditionally, this workshop has been hosted by one of the SuperDARN PI groups, often at their home institution, or at another location such as a site close to a radar installation. A list of the SuperDARN workshop locations and their host institutions is provided below:
YearVenueHost Institution
2019Fujiyoshida, Yamanashi, JapanNational Institute of Information and Communications Technology
2018Banyuls-sur-Mer, FranceL'Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie
2017San Quirico D'Orcia, Siena, ItalyInstitute for Space Astrophysics and Planetology of the National Institute for Astrophysics
2016Fairbanks, Alaska, USAGeophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks
2015Leicester, UKRadio and Space Plasma Physics Group, University of Leicester
2014Longyearbyen, Svalbard, NorwayThe University Centre in Svalbard
2013Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, CanadaUniversity of Saskatchewan
2012Shanghai, ChinaPolar Research Institute of China
2011Hanover, New Hampshire, USADartmouth College
2010Hermanus, South AfricaSANSA Space Science
2009Cargèse, Corsica, FranceLe Centre national de la recherche scientifique
2008Newcastle, New South Wales, AustraliaSchool of Mathematical & Physical Sciences, Newscastle University
2007Abashiri, Hokkaido, JapanInstitute for Space-Earth Environmental Research, Nagoya University
2006Chincoteague, USAJohns Hopkins University, Applied Physics Laboratory
2005Cumbria, UKBritish Antarctic Survey
2004Saskatoon, CanadaUniversity of Saskatchewan
2003Kiljava, Finland
2002Valdez, Alaska, USAGeophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks
2001Venice, Italy
2000Beechworth, Victoria, AustraliaLa Trobe University
1999Reykjavik, Iceland
1998Tokyo, JapanNational Institute of Polar Research
1997Ithala Game Reserve, South Africa
1996Ellicott City, MD, USA
1995Madingley Hall, Cambridge, UK

Research papers

Research papers related to SuperDARN and related technologies
Real time display of SuperDarn radar