Using Principal Component Analysis of Satellite and Ground Magnetic Data to Model the Equatorial Electrojet and Derive Its Tidal Composition

dc.contributor.authorGabriel Soares
dc.contributor.authorYosuke Yamazaki
dc.contributor.authorAchim Morschhauser
dc.contributor.authorJ�rgen Matzka
dc.contributor.authorKatia J. Pinheiro
dc.contributor.authorClaudia Stolle
dc.contributor.authorPatrick Alken
dc.contributor.authorAkimasa Yoshikawa
dc.contributor.authorKornyanat Hozumi
dc.contributor.authorAtul Kulkarni
dc.contributor.authorPornchai Supnithi
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-21T06:07:40Z
dc.date.issued2022-09-01
dc.description.abstractAbstract The intensity of the equatorial electrojet (EEJ) shows temporal and spatial variability that is not yet fully understood nor accurately modeled. Atmospheric solar tides are among the main drivers of this variability but determining different tidal components and their respective time series is challenging. It requires good temporal and spatial coverage with observations, which, previously could only be achieved by accumulating data over many years. Here, we propose a new technique for modeling the EEJ based on principal component analysis (PCA) of a hybrid ground‐satellite geomagnetic data set. The proposed PCA‐based model (PCEEJ) represents the observed EEJ better than the climatological EEJM‐2 model, especially when there is good local time separation among the satellites involved. The amplitudes of various solar tidal modes are determined from PCEEJ based tidal equation fitting. This allows to evaluate interannual and intraannual changes of solar tidal signatures in the EEJ. On average, the obtained time series of migrating and nonmigrating tides agree with the average climatology available from earlier work. A comparison of tidal signatures in the EEJ with tides derived from neutral atmosphere temperature observations show a remarkable correlation for nonmigrating tides such as DE3, DE2, DE4, and SW4. The results indicate that it is possible to obtain a meaningful EEJ spectrum related to solar tides for a relatively short time interval of 70 days.
dc.identifier.doi10.1029/2022ja030691
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.kmitl.ac.th/handle/123456789/11639
dc.subjectElectrojet
dc.subject.classificationSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics
dc.titleUsing Principal Component Analysis of Satellite and Ground Magnetic Data to Model the Equatorial Electrojet and Derive Its Tidal Composition
dc.typeArticle

Files

Collections