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Michi Nishioka
Public Documents
1
Extreme poleward expanding super plasma bubbles triggered by Tonga volcano eruption d...
P. K. Rajesh
and 14 more
June 03, 2022
The Tonga volcano eruption of 15 January 2022 unleashed a variety of atmospheric perturbations, coinciding with the recovery phase of a geomagnetic storm. The ensuing thermospheric variations created rare display of extreme poleward-expanding conjugate plasma bubbles seen in the rate of total electron content index (ROTI) over 100-150°E. This is associated with fluctuations in FORMOSAT-7/COSMIC-2 (F7/C2) ion-density measurements and spread-F signatures in ionograms, reaching ~40°N geographic latitude. This was preceded by an unusually strong pre-reversal enhancement (PRE) in the global ionospheric specification (GIS) electron density profiles derived from F7/C2 observations. The GIS further revealed a decrease of equatorial ionization anomaly (EIA) crest density due to the storm impact. A sharp decrease of E-region conductivity by volcano-induced waves, combined with enhanced F-region wind over EIA with less ion-drag apparently intensified the PRE. The strong PRE and seed perturbations from the volcano-induced waves likely further triggered super plasma bubble activity.