Tropospheric disturbance of 17–21 December 1974 and its effect on microwave propagation

Mitra, A. P. ; Somayajulu, Y. V. ; Singal, S. P. ; Majumdar, S. C. ; Tyagi, T. R. ; Reddy, B. M. ; Agarwal, S. K. ; Gera, B. S. ; Ghosh, A. B. ; Sarkar, S. K. (1977) Tropospheric disturbance of 17–21 December 1974 and its effect on microwave propagation Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 11 (1). pp. 103-116. ISSN 0006-8314

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Official URL: http://www.springerlink.com/content/wu21022v57w542...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00221827

Abstract

A number of troposphere-monitoring experiments were pressed into service during a large tropospheric disturbance which lasted for several days in December 1974. The experiments operated intensively included a monostatic Sodar system, a satellite radio beacon receiver at very low elevation angles, Meteorological Radiosondes, a 250-kW weather radar, a microwave LOS link and a microbarograph. This multi-pronged campaign yielded very useful results and the correspondences between various observations were striking. The Sodar and microwave link observations were visibly affected only when ΔN reached a value of about –70 units; however, the satellite beacon observations showed anomalous behaviour even for lower ΔN values. Rather spectacular coincidences occurred on one night: the large fading (up to 10 db) in the LOS link; highly disturbed conditions displayed in the entire Sodar range; the largest tropospheric effect on the satellite beacon system; and the most active superrefraction of the radar echoes. It was also noticed that these effects are obvious only during nights, while they remain masked or dampened in the sun-lit hours.

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