Investigation of the October effect in very low-frequency (VLF) signals

Subionospheric very low-frequency (VLF) radio signals are reflected by free electrons in the ionospheric D-region at about 60–90 km altitude and can propagate over long distances, which makes them useful for monitoring the state of the D-region or perturbations due to solar flares. At the D-region height, the ionosphere is mainly ionized by solar Lyman-α radiation. The reflection characteristics of VLF signals depend on the state and dynamics of the D-region, which is highly influenced by Lyman-α radiation. Although the amplitude of the received terrestrial VLF signal changes as a function of solar zenith angle over the course of the year, the VLF amplitude shows a distinctive sharp decrease around October, which is hence called the “October effect”. This study investigates the occurrence of the October effect and its dependencies on latitude and longitude. We developed a method to detect the occurrence of the October effect in the long-term VLF data and derive key parameters characterizing (start and end date, intensity) the sudden decrease in the signal amplitude. This investigation using a network of VLF stations distributed over low-, middle-, and high-latitude regions shows that the occurrence of the October effect has a clear latitudinal dependency, occurring earlier in high-latitude regions than at midlatitudes. No low-latitude signature is found.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Hansen, Marc, Banyś, Daniela, Clilverd, Mark ORCIDORCID record for Mark Clilverd, Wenzel, David, Raita, Tero, Hoque, Mohammed Mainul

On this site: Mark Clilverd
Date:
15 January, 2025
Journal/Source:
Annales Geophysicae / 43
Page(s):
55-65
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-43-55-2025