Remington Rohel

and 2 more

Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) consists of more than 30 monostatic high-frequency (HF, 10-18~MHz) radars which utilise signals scattered from decameter-scale ionospheric irregularities for studying dynamic processes in the ionosphere. By combining line-of-sight velocity measurements of ionospheric scatter echoes from radars with overlapping fields of view, SuperDARN provides maps of ionospheric plasma drift velocity over mid and high latitudes. The conventional SuperDARN radars consecutively scan through sixteen beam directions with dwelling time of 3.5 s/beam, which places a lower limit of one minute to sample the entire field of view. In this work we remove this limitation by utilizing advanced capabilities of the recently developed Borealis digital SuperDARN radar system. Combining a wide transmission beam with multiple narrow reception beams allows us to sample all conventional beam directions simultaneously and to increase the sampling rate of the entire field of view by up to sixteen times without noticeable deterioration of the data quality. The wide-beam emission also enabled the implementation of multistatic operations, where ionospheric scatter signals from one radar are received by other radars with overlapping viewing areas. These novel operations required the development of a new model to determine the geographic location of the source of the multistatic radar echoes. Our preliminary studies showed that, in comparison with the conventional monostatic operations, the multistatic operations provide a significant increase in geographic coverage, in some cases nearly doubling it. The multistatic data also provide additional velocity vector components increasing the likelihood of reconstructing full plasma drift velocity vectors.