DocumentCode
905047
Title
The design of swept-frequency topside sounders
Author
Franklin, Colin A. ; Maclean, Michael A.
Author_Institution
Communications Research Centre, Ottawa, Canada
Volume
57
Issue
6
fYear
1969
fDate
6/1/1969 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
897
Lastpage
929
Abstract
Echo sounding of the ionosphere from below has, for four decades, been a fruitful way of obtaining information about the upper atmosphere and the effects of solar emissions. In the last few years, earth satellites have been used as platforms from which to sound the ionosphere from above. This technique has opened new areas of ionospheric research and has the great advantages of world-wide coverage and rapid movement from one observation site to another. The paper is concerned with the design and engineering aspects of the topside sounders in the Alouette and ISIS satellites. It is shown how the requirements of the experiment and the limitations of the spacecraft and its environment determine the design of the instrumentation. The evolution of the swept-frequency sounders is traced from the first sounder, flown in the Alouette I satellite, to the more sophisticated ones in Alouette II and ISIS-I, and engineering problems of particular interest or difficulty are described in detail. Finally, there is a discussion of how these techniques might be extrapolated in a sounder designed to explore very distant regions in the earth´s magnetosphere.
Keywords
Acoustical engineering; Aerospace engineering; Atmosphere; Design engineering; Earth; Instruments; Intersymbol interference; Ionosphere; Satellites; Space vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/PROC.1969.7135
Filename
1449065
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