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Effects of the October 2024 Storm over the Global Ionosphere

Krishnendu Sekhar Paul, Haris Haralambous, Mefe Moses, Sharad C. Tripathi

2025Remote Sensing17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The present study analyzes the global ionospheric response to the intense geomagnetic storm of 10–11 October 2024 (SYM—H minimum of −346 nT), using observations from COSMIC—2 and Swarm satellites, GNSS TEC, and Digisondes. Significant uplift of the F-region was observed across both Hemispheres on the dayside, primarily driven by equatorward thermospheric winds and prompt penetration electric fields (PPEFs). However, this uplift did not correspond with increases in foF2 due to enhanced molecular nitrogen-promoting recombination in sunlit regions and the F2 peak rising beyond the COSMIC—2 detection range. In contrast, in the Southern Hemisphere nightside ionosphere exhibited pronounced Ne depletion and low hmF2 values, attributed to G-conditions and thermospheric composition changes caused by storm-time circulation. Strong vertical plasma drifts exceeding 100 m/s were observed during both the main and recovery phases, particularly over Ascension Island, driven initially by southward IMF—Bz-induced PPEFs and later by disturbance dynamo electric fields (DDEFs) as IMF—Bz turned northward. Swarm data revealed a poleward expansion of the Equatorial Ionization Anomaly (EIA), with more pronounced effects in the Southern Hemisphere due to seasonal and longitudinal variations in ionospheric conductivity. Additionally, the storm excited Large-Scale Travelling Ionospheric Disturbances (LSTIDs), triggered by thermospheric perturbations and electrodynamic drivers, including PPEFs and DDEFs. These disturbances, along with enhanced westward thermospheric wind and altered zonal electric fields, modulated ionospheric irregularity intensity and distribution. The emergence of anti-Sq current systems further disrupted quiet-time electrodynamics, promoting global LSTID activity. Furthermore, storm-induced equatorial plasma bubbles (EPBs) were observed over Southeast Asia, initiated by enhanced PPEFs during the main phase and suppressed during recovery, consistent with super EPB development mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

IonosphereStormMeteorologyEnvironmental scienceGeologyGeographyGeophysicsEarthquake Detection and Analysis