The morphology of equatorial plasma bubbles - a review

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Abstract

Plasma bubbles that occur in the equatorial F-region make up one of the most distinguishing phenomena in the iono-sphere. Bubbles represent plasma depletions with respect to the background ionosphere, and are the major source of electron density irregularities in the equatorial F-region. Such bubbles are seen as plasma depletion holes (in situ satellite observations), vertical plumes (radar observations), and emission-depletion bands elongated in the north-south direction (optical observations). However, no technique can observe the whole three-dimensional structure of a bubble. Various aspects of bubbles identified using different techniques indicate that a bubble has a "shell" structure. This paper reviews the development of the concepts of "bubble" and "shell" in this context.

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Kil, H. (2015). The morphology of equatorial plasma bubbles - a review. Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences. Korean Space Science Society. https://doi.org/10.5140/JASS.2015.32.1.13

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