Convener: Aramesh Seif, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, Canada
Co-convener: Periyadan T. Jayachandran, Uni of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, Canada,
Anthony J. Mannucci, NASA, Pasadena, CA, US.
The onset and evolution of ionospheric irregularities continues to be an unsolved scientific problem. The characteristics and physical driving mechanisms of ionospheric irregularities are significantly different in high-mid and-low-latitude regions, presenting challenges for understanding the relevant processes. Understanding, modeling and predicting regional-and-global characteristics and onset of ionospheric irregularities requires a combination of systems-level approaches with extensive utilization of our growing and increasingly accessible observational tools. Combining ground-and space-based measurements provides a unique opportunity to retrieve complementary information about structure and dynamics of ionospheric irregularities. This session will be a forum for recent advances in our understanding of the physics behind the distribution of plasma-irregularities, and the source mechanisms and physical processes leading to the (regional-and-global) formation and evolution of irregularities. We encourage submissions that develop new integrative approaches for monitoring, modelling, and forecasting this important form of ionospheric space weather. We solicit presentations using observations, modelling, data-model comparisons, retrieval methods and forecasting.
We are looking forward to your participation and discussion your fantastic work in Washington D.C.
WEB address: https://fallmeeting.agu.org/2018/welcome/
Abstracts deadline is 1 August 2018 23:59 EDT.