The ionosphere is that part of the Earth?s atmosphere that results mainly from the
photo ionization of the upper atmosphere. Traditionally, the following ionospheric
regions and their approximate height ranges have been designated: D region (60-90
km); E region (90-150 km); F1 region (150-250 km); and F2 region (above 250 km). Ionosondes
utilize the radio wave-reflecting properties of the ionosphere. The product of the
speed of light in a vacuum and half the elapsed time between vertical transmission
of a single frequency electromagnetic wave and reception of the reflected wave at
the transmitting location is defined as the virtual height of that frequency. A sweep-frequency
ionogram is a plot of virtual height versus frequency and is recorded as instantaneously
as possible. These ionospheric data consist mainly of hourly values for at least one
of the following characteristics: foF2, M(3000)F2, hF2, foF1, M(3000)F1, hF, foE,
hE, foE2, hE2, foEs, fbEs, hEs, fmI, and fxI. The values are five byte (character)
fields. The first three bytes of the field are reserved for a numeric value; the last
two bytes are reserved for the qualifying and descriptive letter, if present. There
are no decimals encoded in these data. Documentation is included. There are two CD-ROM?s
worth of data. One contains 1957 - 1975 data; the other contains 1976-1990 data. ASCII
data files and a DOS-compatible application is included. |