Triple-frequency meteor radar full wave scattering Measurements and comparison to theory
G. Stober, P. Brown, M. Campbell-Brown, and R.J. Weryk

TL;DR
This study applies a full wave backscatter model to triple-frequency meteor radar echoes to validate scattering theory and estimate trail parameters, revealing that Gaussian electron distributions best fit observations but many echoes deviate from the model.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical full wave scattering model applied to tri-frequency radar data to constrain meteor trail parameters and assess theoretical assumptions.
Findings
Gaussian electron distribution best fits echo profiles
Most echoes are not well described by the idealized model
Estimated trail radius and diffusion coefficient are consistent with prior studies
Abstract
Context. Radar scattering from meteor trails depends on several poorly constrained quantities, such as electron line density, q, initial trail radius, r0, and ambipolar diffusion coefficient, D. Aims. The goal is to apply a numerical model of full wave backscatter to triple frequency echo measurements to validate theory and constrain estimates of electron radial distribution, initial trail radius, and the ambipolar diffusion coefficient. Methods. A selection of 50 transversely polarized and 50 parallel polarized echoes with complete trajectory information were identified from simultaneous tri-frequency echoes recorded by the Canadian Meteor Orbit Radar (CMOR). The amplitude-time profile of each echo was fit to our model using three different choices for the radial electron distribution assuming a Gaussian, parabolicexponential, and 1-by-r2 electron line density model. The observations…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamics · Planetary Science and Exploration · Astro and Planetary Science
