Solar Flare Effects on the Earth's Lower Ionosphere
Laura A. Hayes, Oscar S.D. O'Hara, Sophie A. Murray, Peter T., Gallagher

TL;DR
This study analyzes how solar flares affect the Earth's lower ionosphere using VLF radio wave measurements and X-ray data, revealing correlations and response characteristics over a large dataset.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of 334 solar flare events, linking VLF responses to X-ray fluxes and exploring the timing and location effects on the D-region ionosphere.
Findings
VLF amplitude correlates strongly with X-ray fluxes.
D-region response is independent of flare location on the Sun.
Time delays between X-ray peaks and VLF responses vary, with some showing negative delays.
Abstract
Solar flares significantly impact the conditions of the Earth's ionosphere. In particular, the sudden increase in X-ray flux during a flare penetrates down to the lowest-lying D-region and dominates ionization at these altitudes (60-100 km). Measurements of very low frequency (VLF: 3-30kHz) radio waves that reflect at D-region altitudes provide a unique remote-sensing probe to investigate the D-region response to solar flare emissions. Here, using a combination of VLF amplitude measurements at 24kHz together with X-ray observations from the Geostationary Operational Environment Satellite (GOES) X-ray sensor, we present a large-scale statistical study of 334 solar flare events and their impacts on the D-region over the past solar cycle. Focusing on both GOES broadband X-ray channels, we investigate how the flare peak fluxes and position on the solar disk dictate an ionospheric response…
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