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==Section 8.1: Ionosphere==
* Atmosphere gets thinner as you go further away
* At 30 miles in altitude, gets thin enough that UV rays can knock electrons away from molecules
* Gas is ionized by loss of electron, positively charged ion, negative free electron
* Ion + electron respond to voltage, like electrons in conductor
* Atmospheric layer - ionosphere - becomes weak conductor
* Ionosphere extends to 300 miles above surface of Earth
Regions:
* ISS orbits 200 miles above Earht
* Ionosphere arranged into multiple layers (D, E, F layers)
* D layer - 30-60 miles, only present when illuminated by sun
* E layer - 60-70 miles, similar to D region, lasts longer after sunset
* F layer - 100-300 miles, least dens,e partially ionized at night
** F1 layer/F2 layer - split during day, recombine at night
** Height of regions vary with season, TOD, latitude, solar activity
** F2 is highest layer, reaches highest point at noon
===Section 8.1 Summary===





Revision as of 22:35, 30 June 2016

Section 8.1: Ionosphere

  • Atmosphere gets thinner as you go further away
  • At 30 miles in altitude, gets thin enough that UV rays can knock electrons away from molecules
  • Gas is ionized by loss of electron, positively charged ion, negative free electron
  • Ion + electron respond to voltage, like electrons in conductor
  • Atmospheric layer - ionosphere - becomes weak conductor
  • Ionosphere extends to 300 miles above surface of Earth

Regions:

  • ISS orbits 200 miles above Earht
  • Ionosphere arranged into multiple layers (D, E, F layers)
  • D layer - 30-60 miles, only present when illuminated by sun
  • E layer - 60-70 miles, similar to D region, lasts longer after sunset
  • F layer - 100-300 miles, least dens,e partially ionized at night
    • F1 layer/F2 layer - split during day, recombine at night
    • Height of regions vary with season, TOD, latitude, solar activity
    • F2 is highest layer, reaches highest point at noon


Section 8.1 Summary

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