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The NCAR CEDAR Database

Catalogue

June 2007

B.A. Emery

National Center For Atmospheric Research


Boulder, Colorado 80307
Table of Contents
Introduction........................................................................................................................1
Map of sites.................................................................................................................1
Data Holdings .....................................................................................................................2
Satellite Data ..................................................................................................................3
Particle flux data .........................................................................................................3
Geophysical Indices.......................................................................................................3
IMF and Plasma data ..................................................................................................3
Estimated Hemispheric Power....................................................................................4
Midnight Equatorward Boundary .............................................................................. 4
Sunspots, Solar Flux, Kp and ap.................................................................................5
AE indices...................................................................................................................5
Dst index .....................................................................................................................5
Vostok Polar Cap Index ..............................................................................................5
Large Model Output .....................................................................................................6
General Circulation Model .........................................................................................6
AMIE Simulations ......................................................................................................7
Solar Semi-Diurnal Tides ...........................................................................................8
Lunar Semi-Diurnal Tides ..........................................................................................8
Global-Scale Wave Model..........................................................................................8
Incoherent Scatter Radar .............................................................................................8
Jicamarca ISR ...........................................................................................................10
Arecibo ISR ..............................................................................................................11
MU ISR.....................................................................................................................11
Millstone ISR ............................................................................................................11
St Santin ISR.............................................................................................................11
Kharkov ISR .............................................................................................................11
Irkutsk ISR ................................................................................................................12
Chatanika ISR ...........................................................................................................12
EISCAT KST ISR.....................................................................................................12
Sondrestrom ISR.......................................................................................................12
EISCAT Svalbard Radar...........................................................................................13
Ionospheric Doppler Radars ......................................................................................13
Halley HF Radar .......................................................................................................14
SANAE HF Radar.....................................................................................................14
Syowa(-South) HF Radar..........................................................................................14
Syowa-East HF Radar...............................................................................................14
Kerguelen HF Radar .................................................................................................14
Jicamarca JULIA HF Radar......................................................................................15
Kapuskasing HF Radar .............................................................................................15
Saskatoon HF Radar .................................................................................................15
Goose Bay HF Radar ................................................................................................15
Hankasalmi HF Radar...............................................................................................16
Stokkseyri HF Radar.................................................................................................16
Pykkvibaer HF Radar................................................................................................16
Digisondes.....................................................................................................................16
Sondre Stromfjord Digisonde ...................................................................................17
Qaanaaq Digisonde ...................................................................................................17
Optical Instruments ....................................................................................................17
Fabry-Perot Interferometers......................................................................................17
South Pole FPI .................................................................................................18
Arrival Heights FPI..........................................................................................18
Halley FPI ........................................................................................................18
Mount John FPI (red and <100 km ..................................................................18
Arequipa FPI....................................................................................................19
Arecibo FPI......................................................................................................19
Fritz Peak FPI ..................................................................................................19
Ann Arbor FPI .................................................................................................19
Millstone Hill FPI ............................................................................................19
Watson Lake FPI..............................................................................................19
College FPI ......................................................................................................20
Poker Flat FPI ..................................................................................................20
Sondre Stromfjord FPI.....................................................................................20
Inuvik FPI (red and green ................................................................................20
Resolute Bay FPI .............................................................................................21
Thule FPI .........................................................................................................21
Peach Mountain FPI (<100 km).......................................................................21
IR Michelson Interferometers ...................................................................................21
South Pole [OH] Michelson.............................................................................21
Daytona Beach [OH] Michelson......................................................................22
Stockholm [OH] Michelson.............................................................................22
Sondre Stromfjord [OH] Michelson ................................................................23
Resolute Bay [OH] Michelson.........................................................................23
Eureka [OH] Michelson...................................................................................23
Spectrometers............................................................................................................23
Davis [OH] Spectrophotometer .......................................................................23
Wuppertal [OH] Spectrometer.........................................................................24
Airglow Imagers and All-Sky Cameras....................................................................24
[OH]/[O2] Mesospheric Temperature Mapper ................................................24
Utah State University Imager...........................................................................25
Millstone Hill Imager.......................................................................................25
Sondre Stromfjord All-Sky Imager..................................................................25
AFRL All-Sky Cameras...................................................................................25
Lidar 26
University of Illinois Lidar ..............................................................................26
Colorado State Lidar ........................................................................................26
Utah State Lidar ...............................................................................................27
4-Channel Photometers.............................................................................................27
Poker Flat 4-Channel Photometer....................................................................27
Fort Yukon 4-Channel Photometer..................................................................27
Middle Atmosphere Radars .......................................................................................28
MST Radars ..............................................................................................................28
Arecibo MST Radar.........................................................................................28
Poker Flat MST Radar .....................................................................................28
MF Radars.................................................................................................................29
Scott Base MF Radar .......................................................................................29
Davis MF Radar (also TIMED-CEDAR) ........................................................29
Mawson MF Radar ..........................................................................................29
Rothera MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR) ............................................................29
Christchurch MF Radar....................................................................................30
Adelaide MF Radar (also TIMED-CEDAR) ...................................................30
Rarotonga MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR) ........................................................30
Tirunelveli MF Radar (also TIMED-CEDAR)................................................30
Kauai MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR) ...............................................................31
Yamagawa MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR) .......................................................31
Platteville MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR).........................................................31
Wakkanai MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR).........................................................31
Saskatoon MF Radar........................................................................................32
Poker Flat MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR) ........................................................32
Tromsø MF Radar (TIMED-CEDAR).............................................................32
LF Radars..................................................................................................................32
Collm LF Radar ...............................................................................................32
Meteor Wind Radars .................................................................................................33
Ascension Is Meteor Wind Radar (TIMED-CEDAR).....................................33
Christmas Island Meteor Radar .......................................................................33
Atlanta Meteor Wind Radar.............................................................................33
Platteville Meteor Wind Radar ........................................................................33
Durham Meteor Wind Radar ...........................................................................34
Obninsk Meteor Wind Radar (TIMED-CEDAR)............................................34
Esrange Meteor Wind Radar (TIMED-CEDAR) ............................................34
Models...........................................................................................................................34
Theoretical Models ...................................................................................................34
AMIE ...............................................................................................................34
CTIM and CTIP ...............................................................................................35
FLIP .................................................................................................................35
GLOW..............................................................................................................35
TIGCM, TIEGCM,TIMEGCM .......................................................................35
TING ................................................................................................................35
VSH..................................................................................................................36
Empirical Models......................................................................................................36
APEX ...............................................................................................................36
CHIU................................................................................................................36
E FIELD...........................................................................................................36
HMR ................................................................................................................37
HPI ...................................................................................................................37
HWM ...............................................................................................................37
IRI ....................................................................................................................37
IZMEM ............................................................................................................37
MAGFLD.........................................................................................................37
MH ...................................................................................................................37
MSIS ................................................................................................................37
WEIMER .........................................................................................................38
Accessing the Database ...................................................................................................38
Accessing Documentation and plots via the WWW and ftp...................................39
Obtaining Data from the CEDAR Database ...........................................................39
Web Access......................................................................................................39
Data Requests...................................................................................................40
Visiting NCAR.................................................................................................40
Rules of the Road ............................................................................................................41

Bibliography of Database Acknowledgements .............................................................42

CEDAR Database Access Form .....................................................................................47

CEDAR Database Data Request Form .........................................................................48

CEDAR Database Instrument Coverage ......................................................................49

Colorado State University Lidar Listing ......................................................................57

Mesospheric Temperature Mapper Listing ..................................................................59

Sondrestrom All-Sky Imager Listing ............................................................................60

AFRL All-Sky Camera Listing ......................................................................................61

Operational Listing for MLT Radars ...........................................................................63

Parameter Codes List .....................................................................................................66

List of Ground-Based Instruments ................................................................................77

Combined Daily Listing for IS and HF Radars ...........................................................90

Combined Daily Listing for Optical Instruments ......................................................114


Introduction

Figure 1: Locations of instruments with data in the CEDAR Database as of June 2007. There are 11 incoherent
scatter radar sites: Jicamarca, Arecibo, MU Shigaraki, Millstone Hill, St. Santin, Kharkov, Irkutsk, Chatanika,
Sondrestrom, EISCAT at Tromsø and EISCAT Svalbard Radar (ESR). Five of these sites have Fabry-Perot
Interferometers with data in the Database: Arequipa, Arecibo, Millstone, College and Sondre Stromfjord.
Additional Fabry-Perots are located at South Pole, Arrival Heights, Halley, Mt John, Fritz Peak/Ann Arbor, Peach
Mountain, Watson Lake, Poker Flat, Inuvik, Resolute Bay and Thule. All-sky imagers are also located at
Millstone Hill, Sondre Stromfjord and Platteville. Eleven SuperDARN HF radars are located at Halley, SANAE,
Syowa, Syowa-East, Kerguelen, Kapuskasing, Saskatoon, Goose Bay, Hankasalmi, Stokkseyri, and Pykkvibaer.
Drift data are also available from igisondes at Qaanaaq and Sondre Stromfjord and the JULIA HF radar at
Jicamarca. There are 25 middle atmosphere radars: 2 MST radars at Arecibo and Poker Flat; 11 MF radars with
winds at Scott Base, Davis, Mawson, Christchurch, Adelaide, Tirunelveli, Yamagawa, Wakkanai, Saskatoon,
Poker Flat and Tromsø the LF radar at Collm; the Atlanta and Durham meteor wind radars; and the ST radars
with Meteor Echo Detection And Collection (MEDAC) capabilities at Christmas Island and Platteville. Seven of
the MF radars (Davis, Adelaide, Yamagawa, Wakkanai, Saskatoon, Poker Flat and Tromsø) are part of the 14
TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars that provide wind harmonic analyses. The other 7 include 3 meteor radars at
Ascension Island, Obninsk and Esrange, and 4 MF radars at Rothera, Rarotonga, Kauai and Platteville. Lidar data
are available for Arecibo, Urbana, Hawaii, Ft. Collins and Logan. [OH] Michelson Interferometers are located at
South Pole, Daytona Beach, Stockholm, Sondrestrom Fjord, Resolute Bay, and Eureka. A spectrophotometer at
Davis also gives [OH] brightness and temperatures throughout the night. Nightly temperatures are available from
the [OH] spectrometer at Wuppertal, and the [OH]/[O2] imager at Ft. Collins which was moved to Maui. The 4-
channel photometers at Poker Flat and Fort Yukon give auroral information. Vostok is the source of the Vostok
Polar Cap Index data.

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Coupling, Energetics, and Dynamics of Atmospheric Regions (CEDAR) is a program sponsored by
the National Science Foundation (NSF) designed to enhance the capability of ground-based
instruments to measure the upper atmosphere and to coordinate instrument and model data for the
benefit of the scientific community. The CEDAR Database (formerly the Incoherent Scatter Radar Data
Base) is a cooperative project between the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and
several institutions that provide upper atmosphere data and model output for community use. In
addition, the Database also contains material useful for analyzing these data: documentation, catalogue
information, geophysical indices, summary plots, analysis software, and computer models. The purpose
of the Database is to make data from these instruments and models readily accessible for scientific
research by the entire scientific community. The CEDAR Database is part of the TIMED-CEDAR Data
system, where data from many of the ground-based instruments are a part of the regular CEDAR
Database system. The TIMED Database at the Applied Physics Laboratory at the Johns Hopkins
University and is also linked to the CEDAR Database and other distributed databases. Figure 1 shows
the locations of instruments that have data in the CEDAR Database.

The following section outlines the indices, model outputs and instruments that contribute to the
Database, gives the 3-character name and instrument code number(s) (KINST) used by the Database in
the computer files, contact people, links, suggested acknowledgements and references where required.
The magnetic locations are in apex magnetic coordinates, which are similar to corrected geomagnetic
coordinates, but are also defined at lower latitudes. Stations are ordered geographically south to north.
Information is also available for the Ground-based CEDAR-TIMED instruments , which can also be
found on our 'What's New?' page.

The CEDAR Database contact person at NCAR is Barbara Emery (emery@ucar.edu; Tel (303) 497-
1596; Fax (303) 497-1589; HAO/NCAR, P O Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307) Acknowledgements:
This study made use of the CEDAR Database at the National Center for Atmospheric Research which is
supported by the National Science Foundation.

Data Holdings
The CEDAR Database contains only selected data from each instrument. Coordinated campaign periods,
such as World Days, are particularly emphasized, although data collected on a regular basis or in
clusters with other instruments is also valuable. Only small amounts of the data have been manually
inspected to remove inevitable bad data values. In addition, the data are often subject to non-negligible
errors arising from inaccurate assumptions or other uncertainties. The user is required to contact the data
suppliers about the nature, quality and limitations of the data, and to offer co-authorship, which is often
turned down. Acknowledgements of the instruments and of the CEDAR Database is required. (See Rules
of the Road.) The contact people can also provide information about additional data from each
instrument that is not in the Database. In some cases, these additional holdings are substantial.

The CEDAR Database contains approximately 23 GB of data on the cedar computer at NCAR. The
Coverage Table shows the data currently available as the number of months per year with observations
for each instrument/model between 1966 and 2007. The complete inventory listing is available on-line
from the Documents section of our web site. We also have available Summary Plots for all the data.

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Satellite Data

The CEDAR Database has some satellite data, most in the form of indices such as the interplanetary
magnetic field (IMF) and solar wind parameters. Other indices are directly related to the satellite
observations of auroral energy particle observations in the high latitudes. These include the hemispheric
power estimates and the equatorward boundary of the midnight auroral oval.

pfx (170) are particle flux observations from satellites. At present, these are electron and ion flux
observations from the SEM-2 NOAA satellites: NOAA-15, NOAA-16 and NOAA-17. The
measurements in the CEDAR Database go from June 1998 through December 2005, and are 16-sec
integrations of the ion and energy flux in units of W/m2 with an estimate of the 'characteristic' electron
or ion energy in eV. The 'characteristic' energy is defined as the energy band that registered the largest
energy flux, weighted by the particle energy fluxes. The contact person for these data is David Evans
(david.s.evans@noaa.gov; Tel (303) 497-3269, FAX (303) 497-3645; SEC/NOAA, 325 Broadway,
Boulder, CO 80303). Acknowledgements: The 16-sec NOAA satellite low energy particle flux and
'characteristic' energy data were provided by the Space Environment Center, Boulder CO via the
CEDAR Database.

Geophysical Indices

The CEDAR Database has some files of geophysical indices in Database format. At present, these
include Dst, Kp, ap, Ap, solar 10.7 cm flux, sunspot number, AE indices, Vostok Polar Cap indices, IMF
parameters, solar wind parameters, hemispheric power input estimates from the NOAA and DMSP
satellites, and estimates of the magnetic latitude of the equatorward auroral boundary at midnight from
DMSP satellites. Fortran access subroutines like GETNDCS, which are discussed in the Plotting and
Printing section in the Database Access section of this catalogue are available which return specific
values given input date and time. Most geophysical indices do not require acknowledgement of either
the CEDAR Database or any contact person. Exceptions to this are the Vostok Polar Cap Index and
estimates of the hemispheric power and the midnight equatorward auroral boundary, where references
should be given, copies of publications should be sent to the contact person, and the CEDAR Database
should be acknowledged if the values are taken from the Database.

imf (120) are Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF) and solar plasma data from various satellites. Hourly
IMF and plasma data are available from 27 November 1963 to 03 April 2007, while 1 minute IMF data
for World Day campaign periods are available from 13 April 1983 to 19 January 1988. The Space
Environment Center (SEC) also provides a 1-minute data set, which is like the hourly data set in that it
has been time-shifted to the Earth. This data set is available from http://spidr.ngdc.noaa.gov/spidr. The
CEDAR Database has these time-shifted 1-min data from September 1992 through April 2003. Data
are also available from the National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC) at
http://cdaweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/ or ftp://nssdcftp.gsfc.nasa.gov/spacecraft_data/omni, which since
November 2006 includes time-shifted 5 and 1 minute data from 1995-2006 well as hourly data. IMP-8
plasma data from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is also at
ftp://space.mit.edu/pub/plasma/imp/www/imp.html, with real-time values available at
ftp://gopher.sec.noaa.gov/pub/lists/ace through the Space Environment Center of NOAA in Boulder for
the ACE satellite at the Lagrangian L1 point. Level 2 ACE data appears about 3 months after is is
collected at http://www.srl.caltech.edu/ACE/ASC/level2". Aside from the hourly data, the World Day 1
min IMF, and the SEC 1 min values, data at higher time resolution usually contain data from within the
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magnetosheath and magnetotail as well as data in the solar wind. An exception to this is the ACE
satellite since L1 is in front of the Earth's magnetosphere.

ehp (175) are estimates of the low energy auroral hemispheric power from NOAA and DMSP satellites.
These were intercalibrated between satellites at NCAR to provide 'corrected' estimates within a factor of
two for both NOAA and DMSP, as well as hourly composite estimates of the hemispheric power for
each hemisphere. These most recent estimates were revised in November 2006. The contact person for
the intersatellite calibrations is Barbara Emery (emery@ucar.edu; Tel (303) 497-1596; Fax (303) 497-
1589; HAO/NCAR, P O Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307). The NOAA satellite estimates go from 2
November 1978 to 11 June 2007 with a gap between May 1988 and May 1991. NOAA-18 values were
revised in July 2006 and again in March 2007. The contact person for these data is David Evans
(david.s.evans@noaa.gov; Tel (303) 497-3269, FAX (303) 497-3645; SEC/NOAA, 325 Broadway,
Boulder, CO 80303). The NOAA satellite hemispheric power estimates can be obtained at
http://www.sec.noaa.gov/pmap. Click on 'FTP Site' to get the yearly files which usually go up to the day
before. Recent plots are also available on this site. Plots from all the NOAA low energy TED and
medium energy MEPED electron and proton instruments are located at the University of Bergen,
Norway at http://www.fi.uib.no/%7Ekjellmar/noaa. Acknowledgements: The NOAA Hemispheric
Power Index was provided by the Space Environment Center, Boulder CO via the CEDAR Database.
The DMSP satellite estimates are available from 1 January 1983 through 12 June 2007, and were
completely revised in late 2004 to account for sensor degradations in F8-F15 and re-calibrations for
F11-F15. F16 was revised in May 2006. The contact person for the DMSP satellite estimates is
Frederick Rich ( frederick.rich@hanscom.af.mil; Tel (781) 377-3857, FAX (781) 377-3160;
AFRL/BSBXP, 29 Randolph Road, Hanscom Air Force Base, MA 01731-3010). The DMSP satellite
hemispheric power estimates can be obtained at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/dmsp/dmspssj4_hp.html
using a cedar webname and password to get the data. Acknowledgements: The Air Force Research
Laboratory Hemispheric Power Index was provided by the USAF Research Laboratory, Hanscom AFB,
MA via the CEDAR Database. (Please send a courtesy copy of any publications using the hemispheric
power index to Dr. Rich.) References are

Evans, D. S., Global Statistical Patterns of Auroral Phenomena, in Proceedings of the Symposium on
Quantitative Modeling of Magnetospheric-Ionospheric Coupling Processes, 325, Kyoto, 1987. Fuller-
Rowell, T. J. and D. S. Evans, Height-integrated Pedersen and Hall conductivity patterns inferred from
the TIROS-NOAA satellite data, J. Geophys. Res., 92, 7606-7618, 1987.
Hardy, D. A. and M. S. Gussenhoven, A statistical model of auroral electron precipitation, J. Geophys.
Res., 90, A5, 4229-4248, 1985.

eqb (180) are the "Air force Research Laboratory Auroral Boundary Index" estimates of the midnight
equatorward boundary of the aurora from DMSP (Defense Meteorological Satellite Program) satellites
from 1 January 1983 to 12 June 2007. The contact person for these data is Katharine Kadinsky-Cade
( katharine.kadinsky-cade@hanscom.af.mil; AFRL/VSBXS, 29 Randolph Road, Hanscom Air Force
Base, MA 01731-3010). The DMSP satellite estimates of the boundary index are at
http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/dmsp/dmspssj4_midnit.html using a cedar webname and password to get
the data. Acknowledgements: The Air Force Research Laboratory Auroral Boundary Index was
provided by the USAF Research Laboratory, Hanscom AFB, MA via the CEDAR Database. (Please
send a courtesy copy of any publications using the boundary index to Dr. Kadinsky-Cade.) Two
references are

Gussenhoven, M. S., D. A. Hardy and W. J. Burke, DMSP/F2 electron observations of equatorward


auroral boundaries and their relationship to magnetospheric electric fields, J. Geophys. Res., 86, 768-

4
778, 1981.
Gussenhoven, M. S., D. A. Hardy and N. Heinemann, Systematics of the equatorward diffuse auroral
boundary, J. Geophys. Res., 88, 5692-5708, 1983.

gpi (210) are 3-h Kp and ap; daily sunspot numbers, 10.7 cm solar flux and Ap; and 81 day average 10.7
cm solar flux values from 1 January 1960 to 31 May 2007. These geophysical indices are also
available for this period and for earlier years at the World Data Center in Boulder (Tel (303) 497-6475;
National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC), 325 Broadway, E/GC2, Boulder, CO 80303) or online at
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/stp.html and via anonymous ftp at ftp://ftp.ngdc.noaa.gov in the directory
/STP/GEOMAGNETIC_DATA/INDICES/KP_AP.

aei (211) are 1 minute and hourly values of the magnetic indices of AE, AL, AU and AO from 1
January 1978 to 30 June 1988. These are also available from the NGDC sources given above for gpi
data. AE indices are also available from the World Data Center C (WDC-C) at the University of Kyoto
at http://swdcdb.kugi.kyoto-u.ac.jp/aedir. Provisional 1 minute and hourly values of AE, AL, AU and
AO from 1 January 1990 to 31 December 1995 in the CEDAR Database are from WDC-C. Quick-look
plots of AE are also available from WDC-C between 1997 and 2006, with daily downloads for data from
1997-2001. The 1997 data had about 5 of 12 stations operating, which increased to about 8 in later
years. Missing stations will greatly reduce the values during storms. AE estimates are also calculated in
the AMIE technique if high latitude ground magnetometers are used. See AMIE output and contact
Barbara Emery (emery@ucar.edu) for the limited list of AMIE campaign dates.

dst (212) are hourly values of the ring current index Dst calculated from lower latitude ground
magnetometers between 1 Janaury 1957 to 12 June 2007. The last months of data are 'Quick-Look' or
'real-time', while January 2004 to April 2006 are 'Provisional'. Both the provisional and real-time data
were revised in 2006. Dst is available with a 1-day lag from the World Data Center at the University of
Kyoto at http://swdcwww.kugi.kyoto-u.ac.jp/dstdir.

pcv (220) are 15-min (1978-1979, 1983-1991) and 1-min or hourly (1992 - 31 December 2002) values
of the Polar Cap Index (PCI) from Vostok, Antarctica (78.463 S, 106.826 E, 83.3 magS, 3488 m above
msl). Recent and archive values are available at the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute of St.
Petersburg, Russia at http://www.aari.nw.ru by clicking on 'Geophysical Data', and then on 'PC- index'.
The similar Polar Cap Index from Thule, Greenland (77.48 N, 290.83 E, 85.4 magN) can be accessed
from http://web.dmi.dk/projects/wdcc1/pcn/pcn.html. The units of the PCI are dimensionless, but can be
thought of to be approximately related to the "merging electric field" at the nose of the magnetosphere in
mV/m. However, the PCI can be negative for IMF Bz positive conditions, while the merging electric
field is zero or greater since the merging takes place in the polar regions instead of the equatorial
regions. The contact person is Oleg Troshichev ( olegtro@aari.nw.ru; Arctic and Antarctic Research
Institute, Geophysics Department, Bering Street 38, St. Petersburg, 199226, Russia).
Acknowledgements: The Vostok Polar cap Index was provided by the Arctic and Antarctic Research
Institute of St. Petersburg, Russia via the CEDAR Database. (Please send a courtesy copy of any
publications using the boundary index to Dr. Troshichev.) References are

Troshichev, O. A. and G. V. Andrezen, The relationship between interplanetary quantities and magnetic
activity in the southern polar cap, Planet. Space Sci., 33, 415-419, 1985.
Troshichev, O. A., V. G. Andrezen, S. Vennerstroem, and E. Friis-Christensen, Magnetic activity in the
Polar Cap - a new index, Planet. Space Sci., 36, 1095-1102, 1988.
Vennerstroem, S., E. Friis-Christensen, O. A. Troshichev, and V. G. Andrezen, Comparison between the

5
polar cap index, PC, and the auroral electrojet indices AE, AL, and AU, J. Geophys. Res., 96, 101-113,
1991.

Large Model Output

Various large models have output in the CEDAR Database, and much of the output is for generic
conditions. The Rules of the Road for models are different from those for instrument data. All models
should be referenced and if the model or outputs are taken from the CEDAR Database, the Database
should be acknowledged. Users of the AMIE and TIGCM models must offer co-authorship and
generally work closely with the modellers.

gcm (310) are outputs from the Thermosphere Ionosphere General Circulation Model (TIGCM)
developed by Raymond Roble (roble@ucar.edu; Tel (303) 497-1562, FAX (303) 497-1589;
HAO/NCAR, P. O. Box 3000; Boulder, CO 80307) and colleagues. The TIGCM model solves for the
neutral and ion temperature and composition, and neutral winds on pressure surfaces between about 97
km and 550 km. Tidal motions in the neutral winds and temperatures were calculated by Cassandra
Fesen (fesen@tides.utdallas.edu; Tel (972) 883-2815, FAX (972) 883-2761; Hanson Center for Space
Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas, POB 830688 MSF022, Richardson, TX 75083-0688). Several
TIGCM results are available at http://www.hao.ucar.edu/public/research/tiso/tgcm/tgcm.html. A version
of the TIGCM called the Thermosphere Ionosphere Nested Grid (TING) model is located at
http://gandalf.engin.umich.edu with other Space Weather Aeronautical Response Models (SWARM).
The ouputs for the TIGCM in the CEDAR Database are:

a) March 22, 1979 TIGCM neutral and ion winds, temperatures and composition on constant pressure
surfaces between about 100 and 500 km every 5 degrees in longitude and latitude at every hour.

b) Twelve TIGCM generic runs for neutral winds, temperatures, and tides. Neutral winds and
temperatures are interpolated between 100 and 500 km every 15 degrees in longitude and every 5
degrees in latitude at every hour. A tidal analysis is done for the mean and the first 4 harmonics at 0 UT.
There is a generic solar minimum (1976, 10.7 flux=75) and solar maximum (1979, 10.7 flux=195), three
seasons (day numbers 80, 172, and 355), and two levels of magnetic activity parameterized with
hemispheric power (GW) and polar cap potential drop (kV) (3GW/30kV and 11GW/60kV).

c) Eighteen TIGCM generic runs for neutral winds, temperatures, and tides at 70W only. Same as above
except has a third level of higher magnetic activity characterized by 33GW/90kV. 70W is not one of the
24 longitudes in the above runs.

The tides in the CEDAR Database are described in

Fesen, C. G., Geomagnetic activity effects on thermospheric tides: A compendium of theoretical


predictions, J. Atmos. Solar-Terr. Phys., 59, 785-803, 1997.
Fesen, C. G., R. G. Roble, and E. C. Ridley, Thermospheric tides simulated by the National Center for
Atmospheric Research Thermosphere-Ionosphere General Circulation Model at equinox, J. Geophys.
Res., 98, 7805-7820, 1993.
General references for the TIGCM model and the older TGCM model
Dickinson, R.E., E.C. Ridley, and R.G. Roble, A three-dimensional general circulation model of the
thermosphere, J. Geophys. Res., 86, 1499-1512, 1981.
Roble, R.G., R.E. Dickinson, and E.C. Ridley, Global circulation and temperature structure of
6
thermosphere with high-latitude plasma convection, J. Geophys. Res., 87, 1599-1614, 1982.
Roble, R.G., E.C. Ridley, A.D. Richmond, and R.E. Dickinson, A coupled thermosphere/ionosphere
general circulation model, Geophys. Res. Lett., 15, 1325-1328, 1988.
The TIGCM and later models are available for community use for selected studies as described in the
section on Theoretical Models.

are (311) are output from the Assimilative Mapping of Ionospheric Electrodynamics (AMIE) procedure
developed by Arthur Richmond (richmond@ucar.edu; Tel (303) 497-1570, FAX (303) 497-1589;
HAO/NCAR, P. O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307) and colleagues. The AMIE procedure solves for the
auroral energy flux and mean energy, the height integrated conductances, and the electric potential and
currents at 110 km for specific periods using input data from radars, ground magnetometers, and
satellites. Several AMIE results are available at
http://www.hao.ucar.edu/public/research/tiso/amie/AMIE_head.html or under 'Campaigns' at
http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/instruments/cedarplots.html. The AMIE results in the CEDAR Database
are:

a) 18-19 January 1984, electric fields and height-integrated Pedersen and Hall conductivities between 50
and 90 degrees every two degrees in magnetic latitude and every hour in MLT, every 10 minutes in UT.

b) 23-26 September 1986, electric fields, height-integrated Pedersen and Hall conductivities, and auroral
particle energy fluxes and mean electron energies between 50 and 90 degrees every two degrees in
magnetic latitude and every hour in MLT, every 10 minutes in UT.

c) 12-16 January 1988, Northern Hemisphere electric fields, height-integrated Pedersen and Hall
conductivities, and auroral particle energy fluxes and mean electron energies between 44 and 90 degrees
every 2.0 degrees in magnetic latitude and every 60 min in MLT, using data from +/-15.5 min at times
centered on DMSP-F08 passes in either hemisphere for Bz positive or small negative, or in the same
hemisphere for large Bz negative.

d) 20-21 March 1990, electric fields, height-integrated Pedersen and Hall conductivities, and auroral
particle energy fluxes and mean electron energies between 40 and 90 degrees every 1.7 degrees in
magnetic latitude and every 40 min in MLT, every 5 minutes in UT.

e) 8-9 November 1991, Northern Hemisphere electric fields, height-integrated Pedersen and Hall
conductivities, and auroral particle energy fluxes and mean electron energies between 44 and 90 degrees
every 2.0 degrees in magnetic latitude and every 60 min in MLT, using data from +/-5.5 min every 10
minutes in UT.

f) 27-29 January 1992, g) 28-29 March 1992 and h) 20-21 July 1992 Northern Hemisphere electric
fields, height-integrated Pedersen and Hall conductivities, and auroral particle energy fluxes and mean
electron energies between 40 and 90 degrees every 1.7 degrees in magnetic latitude and every 40 min in
MLT, using data from +/-3.5 min every 5 minutes in UT.

A reference for AMIE is

Richmond A.D., and Y. Kamide, Mapping electrodynamic features of the high-latitude ionosphere from
localized observations: Technique, J. Geophys. Res., 93, 5741-5759, 1988.
The AMIE code is available to those who are willing to spend the time learning how to use it as
described in the section on Theoretical Models.
7
sdt (320) are solar semi-diurnal tides calculated by Jeffrey Forbes (forbes@zeke.colorado.edu; Tel
(303) 492-4359, FAX (303) 497-7881; Department of Aerospace and Engineering Sciences, University
of Colorado, Campus Box 429, Boulder, CO 80309) and Francois Vial (vial@ondes.polytechnique.fr;
Tel (33) 1-69-33-47-36 x4529, FAX (33) 1-69-33-30-05; LMD/CNRS, Ecole Polytechnique, 91128
Palaiseau CEDEX, France). The tides are independent of solar cycle, although the nominal year is 1988.
There are monthly values every 2 degrees in latitude between 0 and 110 km of the harmonic analysis of
the neutral horizontal winds, temperature and geopotential. A reference for these tides is

Forbes, J.M., and F. Vial, Monthly simulations of the solar semidiurnal tide in the mesosphere and
lower thermosphere, J. Atmos. Terr. Phys., 51, 649-661, 1989.
These tides were replaced by the solar semi-diurnal tides calculated by the GSWM described below.

sdl (321) are lunar semi-diurnal tides calculated by Francois Vial (vial@ondes.polytechnique.fr; Tel
(33) 1-69-33-47-36 x4529, FAX (33) 1-69-33-30-05; LMD/CNRS, Ecole Polytechnique, 91128
Palaiseau CEDEX, France). and Jeffrey Forbes (forbes@zeke.colorado.edu; Tel (303) 492-4359, FAX
(303) 497-7881; Department of Aerospace and Engineering Sciences, University of Colorado, Campus
Box 429, Boulder, CO 80309). The tides are independent of solar cycle with a nominal year of 1993.
There are monthly values every 2 degrees in latitude between 78 and 102 km of the harmonic analysis of
the neutral horizontal winds, temperature and geopotential. The reference for these tides is

Vial, F. and J. M. Forbes, Monthly simulations of the lunar semidiurnal tide, J. Atmos. Terr. Phys., 56,
1591-1607, 1994.

gsw (322) are older solar diurnal and semi-diurnal tides calculated by the Global-Scale Wave Model
(GWSM) developed by Maura Hagan (hagan@ucar.edu; Tel (303) 497-1537, FAX (303) 497-1589;
HAO/NCAR, P. O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307) and colleagues. More information is at
http://www.hao.ucar.edu/public/research/tiso/gswm/gswm.html along with later results from newer
versions of the model. Both ozone and water vapor forcing are included. The nominal year is 1995.
There are values for January, April, July and October for every 3 degrees in latitude between 0 and 124
km of the harmonic analysis of the neutral horizontal and vertical winds, and temperature. The reference
for these tides is

Hagan, M. E., J. M. Forbes, and F. Vial, On modeling migrating solar tides, Geophys. Res. Lett., 22,
893-896, 1995.

Incoherent Scatter Radar

For incoherent scatter radars (ISR), the primary data contained in the Database are ionospheric electron
densities, ion velocities, and electron and ion temperatures. From these a wide variety of other
parameters can be deduced or inferred. Basic parameters like electron density are those obtainable from
a single measurement, at least in principle, with only minimal assumptions about characteristics of the
medium. Derived parameters like the neutral temperature or the vector electric field require additional
assumptions, such as an atmospheric density model or an assumption of smooth space/time continuity
needed for combining different line-of-sight velocities. Depending on the mode of the experiment and
the level of processing, the Database may have any combination of basic and derived parameters for any
given radar observing period. Figure 2 shows the basic parameter of electron density shown as several
profiles as a function of height above Arecibo, and compared with model estimates.

8
Figure 2: Electron density profiles measured at Arecibo between 1725 UT and 1835 UT on September
18, 1974. The electron densities computed by the Chiu(C) and IRI(I) models from geophysical
conditions present at the time are also plotted for comparison. The right-hand figure shows profiles of
the neutral temperature at Arecibo for the time as determined by the IRI-90(I) and MSIS-86(M) models.

9
Typically at least the electron density, line-of-sight ion velocity, and electron and ion temperatures are
available. Some more advanced derived parameters are available, such as exospheric temperatures from
St. Santin and some neutral meridional winds from Arecibo, Millstone Hill, and Sondrestrom. As part of
the Mesosphere-Lower Thermosphere Coupling Study (MLTCS) campaigns, derived neutral winds and
some harmonic analyses of the ion temperature and neutral winds are available for E region altitudes
from Arecibo, Millstone Hill and Sondrestrom. All the IS radars contribute to the CEDAR-TIMED data
system with coordinated MLTCS campaigns, some with flexible schedules to catch magnetic storms.
This includes the recent addition of the Kharkov, Ukraine and the Irkutsk, Russia IS radars initially
through the distributed Madrigal Database organized by Millstone Hill ISR and described below.

The IS/HF Daily Listing includes an 'F' or 'D' if there are also Fabry-Perot or ion drift Digisonde data
available for that site in the Database. General references for ISR are

Alcaydé, D., editor, Incoherent Scatter Theory, Practice and Science, Technical Report 97/53 from a
collection of lectures given in Cargese, Corsica, 1995, EISCAT Scientific Association, 314 pp,
November 1997.
Aponte, N., M. P. Sulzer and S. A. Gonzalez, "Correction of the Jicamarca Te/Ti ratio problem:
Verifying the effect of electron Coulomb collisions on the incoherent scatter spectrum", science talk at
the 2002 CEDAR Workshop, June 17, 2002, Boulder, CO. Blanc, M., Electrodynamics of the
ionosphere from incoherent scatter: A review, J. Geomag. Geoelectr., 31, 137-164, 1979.
Evans, J.V., Theory and practice of ionosphere study by Thomson scatter radar, Proc. IEEE, 57, 496-
530, 1969.
Evans, J.V., Incoherent scatter contributions to studies of the dynamics of the lower thermosphere, Rev.
Geophys. Space Phys., 16, 195-216, 1978.
Evans, J.V., W.L. Oliver, Jr., and J.E. Salah, Thermospheric properties as deduced from incoherent
scatter measurements, J. Atmos. Terr. Phys., 41, 259-278, 1979.

jro (10) are Jicamarca ISR data from the 50 MHz (6 m) Jicamarca Radio Observatory in Peru (11.9S,
76.0W; 0.73 magN at 520 m above msl), which has operated since 1963. Daytime E-region electron
densities from the bistatic data (11) using the receiver station at Paracas (13.85 S, 76.25 W; 1.29 magS
at 10 m above msl) about 200 km south of Jicamarca are available since 2004. The Jicamarca
Unattended Long-Term studies of the Ionosphere and Atmosphere (JULIA) coherent radar for the study
of ionospheric and atmospheric irregularities is discussed in the Ionospheric Doppler Radar section. The
general contact person for Jicamarca and the data is Jorge (Koki) Chau (jchau@geo.igp.gob.pe; Tel
(51-1) 4364978, FAX (41-1) 4344563; Radio Observatorio de Jicamarca, Instituto Geofisico del Peru,
Aparatado 13-0207, Lima, Peru). The contact person for drift data before March 1995 is Wesley Swartz
(wes@ee.cornell.edu; Tel (607) 255-7120, FAX (607) 255-6236; School of Electrical Engineering, 316
Rhodes Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853). For ion drift data after March 1995 the contact is
Erhan Kudeki (erhan@uiuc.edu; Tel (217) 333-4153, FAX (217) 333-5624; Computer and Systems
Research Lab, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801).
The data are also available at http://jro.igp.gob.pe and at http://skylite.csl.uiuc.edu/jro-isr. The contact
for recent Farady rotation data and bistatic data is David Hysell ( dlh37@cornell.edu; Tel (607) 255-
0630, FAX (607) 254-4780; Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Cornell University, 2108 Snee Hall,
Ithaca, NY 14853). with a web site at http://landau.geo.cornell.edu. Faraday rotation data determine the
electron density and the ion and electron temperatures. When the beam is directed very close to
perpendicular to the magnetic field near the magnetic equator, electron Coulomb collisions result in
measured electron temperature values which are anomalously small (Aponte et al., 2002). The older
Faraday Te/Ti ratios were corrected with a constant increase, whereas the newer Faraday data were
taken 4.5 degrees off perpendicular where the Coulomb collisional effects were mitigated. All data with

10
the original spectral information can now be corrected for the effect of Coulomb collisions.
Acknowledgements for the ISR: The Jicamarca Radio Observatory is a facility of the Instituto
Geofisico del Peru and is operated with support from National Science Foundation Cooperative
Agreements through Cornell University. Acknowledgements for the bistatic data: The Jicamarca
Radio Observatory and the Paracas receiver stations are facilities of the Instituto Geofisico del Peru and
are operated with support from National Science Foundation Cooperative Agreements through Cornell
University.

aro (20) are Arecibo ISR data from the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center in Arecibo, Puerto
Rico (18.3N, 66.75W; 29.0 magN). The radar has been in operation since 1963. The contact person is
Mike Sulzer (msulzer@naic.edu; Tel (787) 878-2612x258, FAX (787) 878-1861; Arecibo Observatory,
PO Box 995, Arecibo, Puerto Rico 00612). The web page is at
http://www.naic.edu/menuimag/atmosfer.htm. Acknowledgements: The Arecibo Observatory is
operated by Cornell University under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.

mui (25) are ISR data from the Middle and Upper atmosphere (MU) radar operating since 1986 from
Shigaraki, Japan (34.8N, 136.1E; 27.3 magN). A description of the site and sample results from various
studies can be found at http://www.kurasc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/index-e.html. The contact person is Shoichiro
Fukao ( fukao@kurasc.kyoto-u.ac.jp; Tel (81) 774-33-5343, FAX (81) 774-31-8463; Radio
Atmospheric Science Center, Kyoto University, Gokanosyo, Uji, Kyoto 611, Japan).
Acknowledgements: The MU radar belongs to and is operated by the Radio Atmospheric Science
Center of Kyoto University.

mlh (30, 31, 32) are ISR data from the fixed zenith antenna (32), the steerable antenna (31) or either
(30) at Millstone Hill (42.6N 71.5W; 53.1 magN). Millstone is located at Haystack Observatory and has
been operated by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 1960. The radar frequency is operated
between 440.0 and 440.4 MHz (0.681 m). The analysis for MIDAS-W data taken since 2002 was finally
completed in March 2006 so better analyses of the recent data have just become available. Many
different scan plots for data in the CEDAR Database and for further data at Millstone Hill can be
accessed at http://www.haystack.edu by clicking on 'Madrigal Database'. This Madrigal Database also
holds data from other IS radars, from several Fabry-Perot Interferometers, and some models and
geophysical indices. The CEDAR Database contact person is John Holt (jmh@haystack.mit.edu; Tel
(781) 981-5625, FAX (781) 981-5766; MIT Haystack Observatory, Off Route 40, Westford, MA
01886). Acknowledgements: The Millstone Hill incoherent scatter radar is supported by the National
Science Foundation.

sts (40, 41, 42, 43) are ISR data from the quadristatic system in France operating between 1963 and
1987. The transmitter was located at St. Santin (40) (44.6N, 2.2E; 39.5 magN), with receivers at Nancay
(41) (47.4N, 2.2E; 42.9 magN), at Mende (42) (44.5N, 3.45E; 39.3 magN) and at Monpazier (43)
(44.7N, 0.8E; 39.7 magN). The contact person is Christine Amory-Mazaudier
(mazaudier@cetp.ipsl.fr; Tel (33) 1 48 86 1263 x3378, FAX (33) 1 48 89 4433; CRPE, 4 avenue de
Neptune, 94107 Saint-Maur CEDEX, France). Acknowledgements: The extension of the CNET (Centre
National d'Etudes des Télécommunications) incoherent scatter facility at St.-Santin to a quadristatic
configuration was supported by the Institut d'Astronomie et de Géophysique and by the Direction des
Recherches et Moyens d'Essais. The facility is operated with financial support from the Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique.

kkv (45) are ISR data from the Kharkov incoherent scatter radar in Ukraine (49.7N, 36.3E; 45.6 magN)
97 m above sea level. Operations started around 1981. There are two antennas, a zenith antenna and a

11
steerable antenna. The contact person is Vitaly I. Taran (iion@kpi.kharkov.ua, the single e-mail for the
Institute; Tel (Fax) +38 0572 451-123; Institute of Ionosphere, 16, Chervonopraporna Str, Kharkov,
61002, Ukraine). Acknowledgements: The Kharkov incoherent scatter radar is operated by the Institute
of Ionosphere with support from the National Academy of Science and the Ministry of Education of the
Ukraine.

ist (53) are ISR data from the Irkutsk incoherent scatter radar in Russia (52.9N, 103.3E; 48.3 magN),
502 m above sea level. Full operations started in 1996, although there are some single measurements
from 1988. Plots and data are also available as part of the Madrigal Database at http://62.76.21.18/cgi-
bin/madrigal/madInvent.cgi or via the other URLS in the Madrigal Database system. The contact person
is Alexandrovich Zherebtsov (uzel@iszf.irk.ru; Institute of Solar-Terrestrial Physics, P.O. Box 4026,
Irkutsk, 664033, RUSSIA, 3952-460265). Acknowledgements: The Irkutsk incoherent scatter radar is
supported by the Russian Academy of Science and the Russian Ministry of Industry, Science and
Technology.

cht (50) are ISR data from the Chatanika radar in Alaska (65.1N, 147.4W; 65.1 magN) that was
operated by SRI International between 1971 and 1982. The radar was then moved to Sondrestrom,
Greenland. The contact person is Craig Heinselman (craig.heinselman@sri.com; Tel (650) 859-3777,
FAX (650) 322-2318; Geoscience and Engineering Center, SRI International, 333 Ravenswood Ave,
Menlo Park, CA 94025). Acknowledgements: The Chatanika incoherent scatter radar was supported by
the National Science Foundation.

eis (70, 71, 72, 73, 74) are ISR data from the tristatic EISCAT (70) (European Incoherent SCATter)
system in Scandinavia in operation since 1981. The transmitter and one receiver are located in Tromsø,
Norway (72) (69.58N, 19.23E; 66.4 magN); another receiver is located in Kiruna, Sweden (71) (67.87N,
20.43E; 64.6 magN); and the final receiver is located in Sodankylä, Finland (73) (67.37N, 26.63W; 63.8
magN). These are UHF receivers. There is also a second, independant VHF ISR with transmitter and
receiver at Tromsø (74). Plots and data are available at http://www.eiscat.uit.no, or can be accessed via
the Madrigal Database from Millstone Hill at http://www.haystack.edu or from SRI
http://transport.sri.com/madrigal. World Day runs will be available, but other private EISCAT data sets
may not be. The Grenoble EISCAT Database can be accessed at http://www-eiscat.ujf-grenoble.fr with
links to the CDPP database with more up-to-date EISCAT and ESR data at
http://cdpp.cesr.fr/english/index.html. The CEDAR Database contact person is Tony van Eyken
(tony.van.eyken@eiscat.com; Tel (+47) 790-21008, FAX (+47) 790-21977; EISCAT Scientific
Association, Box 432, N-9171 Longyearbyen, Norway). For the acknowlegements, it is sufficient to
abbreviate the scientific organizations. They are spelled out here for completeness. Acknowledgements:
We are indebted to the Director and staff of EISCAT for operating the facility and supplying the data.
EISCAT is an international association supported by Finland (SA, Suomen Akatemia), France (CNRS,
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Germany (MPG, Max-Planck-Gesellschaft), Japan
(NIPR, National Institute for Polar Research), Norway (NFR, Norges forskningsråd) Sweden (NFR,
Naturvetenskapliga forskningsrådet) and the United Kingdom (PPARC, Particle Physics and Astronomy
Research Council).

son (80) are ISR data from the Sondrestrom radar at Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (67.0N, 51.0W; 73.3
magN). This radar was moved from Chatanika by SRI International and has been operating since 1983.
A link to the operations schedule, list of archived data, and summary plots of all the recent data is
located at http://isr.sri.com. The Madrigal Database has been recently implemented at SRI to access ISR
data, some FPIs and geophysical data at http://transport.sri.com/madrigal. The contact person is Craig
Heinselman (craig.heinselman@sri.com; Tel (650) 859-3777, FAX (650) 322-2318; Geoscience and

12
Engineering Center, SRI International, 333 Ravenswood Ave, Menlo Park, CA 94025).
Acknowledgements: The Sondrestrom incoherent scatter radar is supported by the National Science
Foundation.

esr (95) are ISR data from the transmitter and receiver of the EISCAT Svalbard Radar (ESR) in
Longyearbyen, Norway (78.15N, 16.05E; 75.0 magN), which has been operational since 1996. The links
for plots and data are the same as for EISCAT. The contact person is Tony van Eyken
(tony.van.eyken@eiscat.com; Tel (+47) 790-21008, FAX (+47) 790-21977; EISCAT Scientific
Association, Box 432, N-9171 Longyearbyen, Norway). The acknowlegements are identical to those for
the other EISCAT facilities. Acknowledgements: We are indebted to the Director and staff of EISCAT
for operating the facility and supplying the data. EISCAT is an international association supported by
Finland (SA, Suomen Akatemia), France (CNRS, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique),
Germany (MPG, Max-Planck-Gesellschaft), Japan (NIPR, National Institute for Polar Research),
Norway (NFR, Norges forskningsråd) Sweden (NFR, Naturvetenskapliga forskningsrådet) and the
United Kingdom (PPARC, Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council).

Ionospheric Doppler Radars

The Jicamarca Unattended Long-Term studies of the Ionosphere and Atmosphere (JULIA) system is an
HF ionospheric doppler radar to study ionospheric and atmospheric irregularities with basic parameters
of signal-to-noise and drift velocity. Only the proxy F-region ion drifts from the 150-km echoes are in
the CEDAR Database.

Most other HF ionospheric doppler radars are organized into a community called SuperDARN. Ten of
these radars have some data in the CEDAR Database. The basic SuperDARN parameters are the line-of-
sight plasma irregularity velocity and velocity spread. The former is assumed to be equal to the ion
velocity. In general, very little SuperDARN HF data are in the CEDAR Database, but can be obtained
from the contact people. The IS/HF Daily Listing lists what HF campaign data is in the CEDAR
Database.

The major SuperDARN link is http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu. Plots of data from the 9 northern hemisphere
sites are available at http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu/cgi-bin/archive/entry_page.cgi. Condensed line-of-
sight data are available on-line for these northern hemisphere HF radars as part of the CEDAR-TIMED
data system. Plots for the 6 southern hemisphere radars are at http://dabs.nerc-
bas.ac.uk/~nma/share_routine/Catalog.html and at http://www.uap.nipr.ac.jp/SD/. Other plots for the
CUTLASS radars of Hankasalmi and Pykkvibaer are available at
http://ion.le.ac.uk/cutlass/summary_plot_choose.html. The SuperDARN HF radars are a part of the
TIMED-CEDAR Data system, with access to data back to 1993 at http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu/timed/.
References for HF radars are

Chau, J. L. and R. F. Woodman, (2004), Daytime vertical and zonal velocities from 150-km echoes:
Their relevance to F-region dynamics, Geophys. Res. Lett., 31, doi:10.1029/2004GL020800.
Greenwald, R. A., K. B. Baker, R. A. Hutchins, and C. Hanuise, An HF phased-array radar for studying
small-scale structure in the high-latitude ionosphere, Radio Sci., 20, 63-79, 1985.
Greenwald, R. A. et al., DARN/SUPERDARN, a global view of the dynamics of high-latitude
convecton, Space Science Reviews, 71, 761-796, 1995.
Ruohoniemi, J. M., R. A. Greenwald, K. B. Baker, and J. P. Villain, Drift motions of small-scale
13
irregularities in the high-latitude F region: An experimental comparison with plasma drift motions, J.
Geophys. Res., 92, 4553-4564, 1987.

hhf (820) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Halley, Antarctica (75.5S, 26.6W; 61.5 magS).
Halley is run by the British Antactic Survey and has been in operation since January 1988. Its
coordinates change slightly because it floats on an ice shelf and has to be moved sometimes. The
Database contains data from 7 campaigns between 1990 and 1999. The contact person is Michael
Pinnock (m.pinnock@bas.ac.uk; Tel (44) 223-251534, FAX (44) 223-62616; British Antarctic Survey,
High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge, CB3 0ET, United Kingdom). The BAS SuperDARN website
is at http://dabs.nerc-bas.ac.uk/public/uasd/instrums/share/intro.html. Acknowledgements: The Halley
HF radar is jointly supported by the British Antarctic Survey, which is part of the United Kingdom
Natural Environment Research Council, and the National Science Foundation Division of Polar
Programs.

san (825) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at the South African National Antarctic Expedition
(SANAE) site in Antarctica (71.68S, 2.85W; 62.0 magS). SANAE is run by the University of Natal and
the Potchefstroom University for Christelike Hoer Onderwys (PUCHE) and has been in operation since
1997. SANAE is westward scanning and Halley is the other HF radar for the most direct 2-D merging of
SANAE velocity data. The Database contains data from 1 campaign in May 1999. The contact person is
David Walker (walker@nu.ac.za; Tel (27) 31-260-2770; FAX (27) 31-261-6550; School of Pure and
Applied Physics, University of Natal, Durban 4041, South Africa). Acknowledgements: The SANAE
HF radar is jointly operated by the University of Natal and the Potchefstroom University for Christelike
Hoer Onderwys (PUCHE) in South Africa. The radar was developed under funding from the South
African Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism (DEAT), the UK Natural Environment
Research Council, and the US National Science Foundation (Grant OPP-9421266). Operations are
funded by DEAT.

syf (830) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Syowa, Antarctica (69.02S, 39.56E; 64.9 magS),
operated by the National Institute of Polar Research in Japan since February 1995. Syowa HF radar is
westward scanning and Halley HF radar data are the most direct for 2-D merging of the Syowa velocity
data. Data for one campaign in 1995 and another in 1999 are currently in the CEDAR Database. The
Syowa SuperDARN website is at http://www.uap.nipr.ac.jp/SD/. The contact person is Natsuo Sato
(nsato@nipr.ac.jp; (Tel: (81) 3-3962-4711, Fax: (81) 3-3962-5742; National Institute of Polar Res., 9-10
Kaga 1-Chome, Itabashi-Ku, Tokyo 173, Japan) Acknowledgements: The Syowa Station HF radar is
operated by the National Institute of Polar Research in Japan.

sye (831) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Syowa-East, Antarctica (69.02S, 39.56E; 64.9
magS), operated by the National Institute of Polar Research in Japan since 1997. The radar is eastward
scanning and Kerguelen HF radar data are the most direct for 2-D merging of the Syowa-East velocity
data. Data for one campaign in 1999 are currently in the CEDAR Database. The Syowa SuperDARN
website is at http://www.uap.nipr.ac.jp/SD/. The contact person is Natsuo Sato (nsato@nipr.ac.jp; (Tel:
(81) 3-3962-4711, Fax: (81) 3-3962-5742; National Institute of Polar Res., 9-10 Kaga 1-Chome,
Itabashi-Ku, Tokyo 173, Japan) Acknowledgements: The Syowa Station HF radar is operated by the
National Institute of Polar Research in Japan.

kgf (835) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Kerguelen Island (49.35S, 70.28E; 58.9 magS),
operated by CNRS, France since July 2000. The radar is southward scanning and Syowa-East HF radar
data are the most direct for 2-D merging of the Kerguelen velocity data. Data for one campaign in 2000
are currently in the CEDAR Database. Kerguelen summary plots are available via ftp at

14
ftp://canopus.cnrs-orleans.fr/pub/KER/SMR-PS/. The contact person is Jean-Paul Villain
(jvillain@cnrs-orleans.fr; Tel: (33) 38-515-287, Fax: (33) 38-631-234; LPCE/CNR, 3A Avenue de la
Recherch, 45071 Orleans Cedex 2, France). Acknowledgements: The Kerguelen Island HF radar is
operated by CNRS/LPCE (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique/ Laboratoire de Physique
Chimie de l'Environnement) and CNRS/CETP (Centre d'etudes des Environnements Terrestre et
Planetaires) with support from the Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers.

jul (840) are HF data from the JULIA (Jicamarca Unattended Long-Term studies of the Ionosphere and
Atmosphere) system at Jicamarca, Peru (11.95 S, 76.87 W; 520 m alt). The JULIA system was intended
for uninterrupted observations of ionospheric and atmospheric irregularities. JULIA shares the antenna,
receiving system, processing, etc. with the ISR, but uses different transmitters. JULIA ionospheric
irregularity data have been collected beginning in August 1996 as signal-to-noise ratios and drifts.
Horizontal zonal drifts are deduced with radar intererometry. Vertical drifts refer to Doppler phase
speeds where positive values imply upward phase propagation in the morning and evening E-rgion
electrojet (EEJ) and nighttime equatorial Spread F (ESF) modes. Daytime 150-km (averaged over 140-
170 km) echoes were observed by JULIA starting in 2001 and are a proxy for F-region (200-500 km)
ISR drifts [Chau and Woodman, 2004]. These proxy drifts from August 2001 to the present are in the
CEDAR Database. The contact person is Jorge (Koki) Chau (jchau@geo.igp.gob.pe; Tel (51-1)
4364978, FAX (41-1) 4344563; Radio Observatorio de Jicamarca, Instituto Geofisico del Peru,
Aparatado 13-0207, Lima, Peru). Acknowledgements: The Jicamarca Radio Observatory is a facility of
the Instituto Geofisico del Peru and is operated with support from the National Science Foundation
Cooperative Agreement ATM-0432565 through Cornell University.

khf (845) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Kapuskasing, Canada (49.39N, 82.32W; 60.5
magN), operated by the Applied Physics Lab since July 1993. Data for 19 campaigns since 1993 are in
the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Michael Ruohoniemi (ruohoniemi@jhuapl.edu; Tel: (240)
228-4572, Fax: (240) 228-6670; Applied Physics Laboratory, The Johns Hopkins University, Johns
Hopkins Road, Laurel, MD 20723-6099). Acknowledgements: The Kapuskasing HF radar is operated
by the Applied Physics Laboratory of The Johns Hopkins University with support from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Foundation.

shf (861) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Saskatoon, Canada (52.16N, 106.53W; 60.9
magN), operated by the University of Saskatchewan since July 1993. Data for 19 campaigns since 1993
are currently in the CEDAR Database. The Saskatoon SuperDARN website is at
http://radar2.usask.ca.index.html. The contact person is George Sofko (sofko@skisas.usask.ca; Tel:
(306) 966-6444, Fax: (306) 966-6400; Inst of Space & Atmos Studies, University of Saskatchewan,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 0W0, Canada). Acknowledgements: The Saskatoon HF radar is
operated by the University of Saskatchewan with support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council of Canada.

gbf (870) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Goose Bay, Canada (53.32N, 60.46W; 61.7
magN), operated by the Applied Physics Lab since October 1983. Data for 30 campaigns since 1988 are
in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Michael Ruohoniemi (ruohoniemi@jhuapl.edu; Tel:
(240) 228-4572, Fax: (240) 228-6670; Applied Physics Laboratory, The Johns Hopkins University,
Johns Hopkins Road, Laurel, MD 20723-6099). Acknowledgements: The Goose Bay HF radar is
operated by the Applied Physics Laboratory of The Johns Hopkins University with support from the
National Science Foundation.

15
fhf (900) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Hankasalmi, Finland (62.32N, 26.61E; 58.6
magN). Hankasalmi has been operated by the University of Leicester since March 1995. Data for 11
campaigns since 1995 are in the CEDAR Database. The CUTLASS web site is
http://ion.le.ac.uk/cutlass/cutlass.html. The contact person is Mark Lester (mle@ion.le.ac.uk; Tel (44)
0116-252-3580, FAX (44) 0116-252-3555; Radio and Space Plasma Physics, Department of Physics and
Astronomy, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom). Acknowledgements: The
CUTLASS (Co-operative UK Twin Located Auroral Sounding System) radars form part of the
SuperDARN (Dual Auroral Radar Network) HF project and consist of radars at Hankasalmi, Finland
and Pykkvibaer, Iceland. They are operated by the Radio and Space Plasma Physics Group at the
University of Leicester with support from the Particle Physics and Astronomy Council, and additional
support from the Finnish Meteorological Institute and the Swedish Meteorological Institute.

whf (910) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Stokkseyri, Iceland (63.86N, 22.02W; 64.8
magN), Stokkseyri has been operated by CNRS, France since June 1994. Data for 15 campaigns since
1995 are in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Jean-Paul Villain (jvillain@cnrs-orleans.fr;
Tel: (33) 38-515-287, Fax: (33) 38-631-234; LPCE/CNR, 3A Avenue de la Recherch, 45071 Orleans
Cedex 2, France). Acknowledgements: The Stokkseyri HF radar is operated by CNRS/LPCE (Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique/ Laboratoire de Physique Chimie de l'Environnement) and
CNRS/CETP (Centre d'etudes des Environnements Terrestre et Planetaires) with support from the
Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers.

ehf (911) are HF data from the SuperDARN station at Pykkvibaer, Iceland (63.86N, 19.20E; 64.4
magN). Pykkvibaer has been operated by the University of Leicester since 1996. Data for 10 campaigns
since 1996 are in the CEDAR Database. The CUTLASS web site is
http://ion.le.ac.uk/cutlass/summary_plot_choose.html. The contact person is Mark Lester
(mle@ion.le.ac.uk; Tel (44) 0116-252-3580, FAX (44) 0116-252-3555; Radio and Space Plasma
Physics, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, United
Kingdom). Acknowledgements: The CUTLASS (Co-operative UK Twin Located Auroral Sounding
System) radars form part of the SuperDARN (Dual Auroral Radar Network) HF project and consist of
radars at Hankasalmi, Finland and Pykkvibaer, Iceland. They are operated by the Radio and Space
Plasma Physics Group at the University of Leicester with support from the Particle Physics and
Astronomy Council, and additional support from the Finnish Meteorological Institute and the Swedish
Meteorological Institute.

Digisondes

Ion drift data from the Qaanaaq and Sondre Stromfjord Digisondes are available for most days in 1993,
with Qaanaaq data also available in 1989. The velocity vector is a derived parameter from a least-
squares fit of a Fourier analysis of scattering from many irregularities in the F region of the ionosphere.
A list of digisonde stations and contact people is located at http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm, including a
link to the digisonde at Millstone Hill at http://digisonde.haystack.edu. References are
Bibl, K. and B. W. Reinisch, The universal digital ionosonde, Radio Sci., 13, 519-530, 1978.
Scali, J. L., B. W. Reinisch, C. J. Heinselman and T. W. Bullett, Coordinate Digisonde and incoherent
scatter radar F region drift measurements at Sondre Stromfjord, Radio Sci., 30, 1481-1498, 1995.

The electron density profiles from the digisondes or their scaled characteristics are available in the
Standard Archiving Output (SAO) format for ionograms at the Millstone Hill site, at the University of
16
Massachusetts at Lowell website, and via the SPIDR delivery program at the World Data Center A in
Boulder, Colorado at http://spidr.ngdc.noaa.gov.

ssd (2890) are ionosonde drift data from the station at Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (67.00N, 309.05E;
73.3 magN), which has been operating since 1986. The contact person is Bodo Reinisch
(bodo_reinisch@uml.edu; Tel (978) 934-4903, FAX (978) 459-7915; Center for Atmospheric Research,
600 Suffolk St, University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA 01854). Acknowledgements: The Sondre
Stromfjord Digisonde is owned and operated by the US Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) at
Hanscom Air Force Base. The data is analyzed, processed and supplied by the University of
Massachusetts Lowell Center for Atmospheric Research under contract with AFRL.

qad (2930) are ionosonde drift data from the station at Qaanaaq, Greenland (77.5N, 69.4W; 85.6
magN), which has been operating since 1983. The contact person is Bodo Reinisch
(bodo_reinisch@uml.edu; Tel (978) 934-4903, FAX (978) 459-7915; Center for Atmospheric Research,
600 Suffolk St, University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA 01854). Acknowledgements: The Qaanaaq
Digisonde is owned and operated by the US Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) at Hanscom Air
Force Base. The data is analyzed, processed and supplied by the University of Massachusetts Lowell
Center for Atmospheric Research under contract with AFRL.

Optical Instruments

All optical instruments measure or rely on photocounts or emissions. Many optical instruments measure
the day or night glow of emissions from an observing species as it goes from one excited state to
another. Typically, an emission layer is several km thick so the measured emission represents an average
over the layer. These optical instruments can usually change the filters they use to measure different
atmospheric species that are located at different heights. Most species are neutral so emissions are
related to the neutral density of the obseving species, and other derived parameters can include neutral
temperatures and winds. Typical observing species are the red line of atomic oxygen around 250 km, the
green line of excited atomic oxygen around 97 km, the IR hydroxyl [OH] emission around 87 km, and
the [O2] emission around 94 km. Other optical instruments are simple all-sky cameras that take
photographs of auroral emissions. These are all passive optical instruments. However, lidars are very
sophisticated optical instruments that send out laser beams of particular wavelengths to excite various
species, and retrieve the photocounts over a range of heights with very good vertical height resolution
like radars.

Fabry-Perot Interferometers

The basic parameters for Fabry-Perot interferometers (FPI) are brightness (often uncalibrated), neutral
temperature, and line-of-sight neutral winds. Derived parameters are vector neutral winds. Of the 15
Fabry-Perots in the CEDAR Database, 14 use the atomic oxygen red line measurements at 630 nm, and
so are a measure of conditions around 200-300 km. Peach Mountain has measurements of the atomic
oxygen green line at 557.7 nm around 97 km (+/-10-15km) and OH (892 nm) measurements around 87
km, while Mt John has observations at all 3 filters. The two CEDAR-TIMED FPI's at Poker Flat and
Inuvik started looking at the red line, but both currently look at the green line around 97 km to better
coordinate with TIMED instrument observations. The Optical Daily Listing shows all the mostly nightly
data from the Fabry-Perot Interferometers, Lidars, and [OH] measuring instruments in the CEDAR
Database, although the listing for Arequipa between 1983 and 1990 are monthly averaged quiet-time
17
winds. A 'D' in the list indicates that there are also ion drift Digisonde data available for that site in the
Database. References are
Hernandez, G., Fabry-Perot Interferometers, Cambridge University Press, 343 pp, 1986.
Jacka, F., Application of Fabry-Perot spectrometers for measurement of upper atmosphere temperatures
and winds, Handbook for MAP, Vol. 13, 19-40, 1984.

spf (5000) has FPI red and green line and [OH] data from South Pole, Antarctica (90S, 0E; -74.4 magN),
which has been operated by the University of Washington since 1989. Red line data from 1989-1999 are
in the CEDAR Database. Cloud (sky) cover and auroral sightings were added from surface observations
stored in the Data Support Section (DSS) of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR).
The contact person is Gonzalo Hernandez (hernandez@u.washington.edu; Tel: (206) 543-9055, Fax:
(206) 543-0489; Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, P. O. Box 351310,
Seattle, WA 98195-1310, USA). Acknowledgements: The Amundsen-Scott South Pole Fabry-Perot
Interferometric Spectrometer is operated by the Department of Earth and Space Sciences of the
University of Washington with support from the Office of Polar Programs of the National Science
Foundation. Surface observations were supplied by the South Pole Meteorological Group.

ahf (5015) are FPI red line data from Arrival Heights, Antarctica (77.83S, 166.66E; 79.9 magS at 190.3
m above msl) near McMurdo/Scott Base. The site has been operated by the University of Washington
since 2002 with red line (~250 km) data in the CEDAR Database from March 2002 to September 2005.
Other data are from the green line, [OH] and [O2]. The contact person is Gonzalo Hernandez
(hernandez@u.washington.edu; Tel: (206) 543-9055, Fax: (206) 543-0489; Department of Earth and
Space Sciences, University of Washington, P. O. Box 351310, Seattle, WA 98195-1310, USA).
Acknowledgements: The Arrival Heights Antarctica Fabry-Perot Spectrometer is operated by the
Department of Earth and Space Sciences of the University of Washington with support from the Office
of Polar Programs of the National Science Foundation. Surface observations were supplied by the
Antarctic Meteorological Research Center (AMRC) of the University of Wisconsin.

hfp (5020) are FPI red line data from Halley, Antarctica (75.5S, 26.6W; -61.5 magN), which has been
operated by the British Antarctic Survey since 1988. Data from 1988-1998 are in the CEDAR Database.
The 1994-1995 data were replaced in 2006. The contact person is Peter Kirsch pjki@bas.ac.uk; Tel:
(44) 1223-221632, Fax: (44) 1223-221226; British Antarctic Survey, Physical Sciences Division, High
Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge, CB3 0ET, United Kingdom). Acknowledgements: The Halley
Fabry-Perot Interferometer is operated by the British Antarctic Survey which is part of the United
Kingdom's Natural Environment Research Council.

mjf (5060) are FPI red line, green line and [OH] data from Mount John, New Zealand (43.98S, 170.42E,
51.8 mlatS) which has been operated since 1991 by the University of Washington in cooperation with
the University of Canterbury and the University of Alaska. Green line data from around 97 km is
available between February 1991 and December 1993, while [OH] data around 87 km is available
February 1991 to December 1994. The red line data around 250 km is not as extensive, with some dates
between May 1991 and February 1993, and some more between February and August in 1996. The
contact person is Gonzalo Hernandez (hernandez@u.washington.edu; Tel: (206) 543-9055, Fax: (206)
543-0489; Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, P. O. Box 351310,
Seattle, WA 98195-1310, USA). Acknowledgements: The Mount John Fabry-Perot Interferometric
Spectrometer is operated by the Department of Earth and Space Sciences of the University of
Washington and the Department of Physics and Astronomy of the University of Canterbury, New
Zealand, in cooperation with the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska. Support from both
the National Science Foundation and the University of Canterbury is acknowledged.

18
aqf (5140) are monthly averages of FPI red line data from Arequipa, Peru (16.5S, 71.5W; -3.4 magN),
which has been operated by the University of Pittsburg and Clemson University since 1988. Monthly
averaged data from 1983-1990, and better quality nighttime measurements from 1996-1999 are in the
CEDAR Database. The contact person is John Meriwether (john.meriwether@ces.clemson.edu; Tel:
(864) 656-0915, Fax: (864) 656-0805; Department of Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University,
Clemson, SC 29634-0978). Acknowledgements: The Arequipa Automatic Airglow Observatory is
jointly operated by the University of Pittsburgh and Clemson University with support from the National
Science Foundation. Space and on-site technical support are provided by the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration.

afp (5160) are FPI red line data from Arecibo, Puerto Rico (18.35N, 66.75W; 29.1 magN), which has
been operated by Cornell University since 1972. Data from 1980-1999 are in the CEDAR Database. The
contact person is Craig Tepley (craig@naic.edu; Tel: (787) 878-2612x257, Fax: (787) 878-1861;
Arecibo Observatory, P.O. Box 995, Arecibo, Puerto Rico 00612). A web page is at
http://www.naic.edu/menuimag/atmosfer.htm. Acknowledgements: The Arecibo Observatory is
operated by Cornell University under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.

fpf (5240) are FPI red line data from Frizt Peak, Colorado, USA (39.86N, 105.52W; 48.8 magN at
~3km above msl). The site was operated by the Aeronomy Laboratory of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration in Boulder Colorado from 1969 to 1985. Two spectrometers were operated,
the first for green line (~97 km) atomic oxygen data from 1969 to 1985, and the second for red line
(~240 km) atomic oxygen data starting with tests in 1972. Red line (~240 km) data are in the CEDAR
Database from February 1973 to May 1985. The contact person is Gonzalo Hernandez
(hernandez@u.washington.edu; Tel: (206) 543-9055, Fax: (206) 543-0489; Department of Earth and
Space Sciences, University of Washington, P. O. Box 351310, Seattle, WA 98195-1310, USA).
Acknowledgements: The Fritz Peak, Colorado Fabry-Perot Spectrometers were operated by the
Aeronomy Laboratory of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration from 1969 to 1985.

aaf (5292) are FPI red line data from Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA (42.29N, 83.71W; 53.8 magN at 276
m above msl). The site was operated by the University of Michigan from 1986 to 1987. The
spectrometer was the same spectrometer used at Fritz Peak, Colorado from 1972 to 1985 for red line
(~240 km) atomic oxygen data. Red line (~240 km) data are in the CEDAR Database from March 1986
to August 1987. The contact person is Gonzalo Hernandez (hernandez@u.washington.edu; Tel: (206)
543-9055, Fax: (206) 543-0489; Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, P.
O. Box 351310, Seattle, WA 98195-1310, USA). Acknowledgements: The Ann Arbor, Michigan
Fabry-Perot Spectrometer was operated by the University of Michigan from 1986 to 1987 with support
from the National Science Foundation.

mfp (5340) are FPI red line data from Millstone Hill, USA (42.6N, 71.5W; 53.1 magN), which has been
operated by the MIT Haystack Observatory since 1986. Data from 1989 to nearly the present are in the
CEDAR Database. The contact person is Dwight Sipler (dps@haystack.mit.edu; Tel: (781) 981-5626,
Fax: (781) 981-0590; MIT Haystack Observatory, Westford, MA 01886). The web page at
http://www.haystack.edu links to the data ('Madrigal Database') and to a description of the instrument
and facility ('Optical Facility'). Acknowledgements: The Millstone Hill Fabry-Perot is supported by the
National Science Foundation.

wfp (5430) are FPI red line data from Watson Lake, Canada (60.06N, 128.58W; 64.1 magN), which was
operated by the University of Michigan between 1991 and 1993, before it was moved to Carmen Alto,
Chile. Data from November 1991 through April 1992 are in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is

19
Rick Niciejewski (niciejew@umich.edu; Tel: (734) 647-3445, Fax: (734) 763-0437; Space Physics
Laboratory, University of Michigan, 2455 Hayward St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109). Acknowledgements:
The Watson Lake Fabry-Perot is operated by the University of Michigan with support from the National
Science Foundation and the United States Air Force.

cfp (5460) are FPI red line data from College, USA (64.7N, 148.1W; 64.6 magN), which was operated
by the University of Alaska from 1981-1986. Data between March 1981 and April 1983 are in the
CEDAR Database. The contact person is Robert Sica (sica@uwo.ca; Tel: (519) 679-3521, Fax: (519)
661-2033; Department of Physics, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, N6A 3K7,
CANADA). Acknowledgements: The College Fabry-Perot was operated by the University of Alaska
with support from the National Science Foundation.

pkf (5465) are FPI red line data from Poker Flat, USA (65.12N, 147.43W; 65.2 magN), which was
operated by the University of Alaska since 1994. This is an all-sky scanning imaging instrument that
uses a CCD detector separated into 47 zones over the sky. A web page is at
http://thing.pfrr.alaska.edu/conde. Temperatures and winds are found for all zones. The green line filter
replaced the red line filter on April 12, 2002. Red line data between January 11 and April 10, 2002 are in
the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Dirk Lummerzheim (lumm@gi.alaska.edu; Tel: (907)
474-7564, Fax: (907) 494-7290; Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, P. O. Box 757320, 903
Koyukuk Drive, Fairbanks, AK, USA). Acknowledgements: The Poker Flat scanning imaging Fabry-
Perot Spectrometer is operated by the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska. Initial funding
came from the Aeronomy Program of the National Science Foundation (NSF), with additional support
from the joint TIME/CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
and NSF.

sfp (5480) are FPI red and later green line data from Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (66.99N, 50.95W;
73.3 magN), which is operated by the University of Michigan starting in 1983. Red line data from 1983-
1994, and 2002-2004 are in the CEDAR Database, while green line data are available concurrently for
the 2002-2003 winter. The contact person is Rick Niciejewski (niciejew@umich.edu; Tel: (734) 647-
3445, Fax: (734) 763-0437; Space Physics Laboratory, University of Michigan, 2455 Hayward St, Ann
Arbor, MI 48109). Acknowledgements: The Sondre Stromfjord Fabry-Perot is operated by the
University of Michigan with support from the National Science Foundation.

ikf (5510) are FPI red and green line data from Inuvik, Canada (68.33N, 133.50W; 71.2 magN), which
was operated by the University of Alaska since 1998, with reliable data after about February 2000. This
is a fixed-gap imaging FPI with a CCD detector, and a periscope to look in any direction, but has been
pointed vertically since February 2000. The green line filter replaced the red line filter in November,
2001. Good red line data between February 2000 and September 2001 are in the CEDAR Database.
Most of the green line data between December 2001 and April 2005 are in the CEDAR Database, along
with cloud cover data added from DSS at NCAR to help choose what data are good. The web page at
http://gedds.pfrr.alaska.edu/inuvik_FPS/default.htm shows plots and delivers the recent green line data.
The contact person is Dirk Lummerzheim (lumm@gi.alaska.edu; Tel: (907) 474-7564, Fax: (907) 494-
7290; Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska, P. O. Box 757320, 903 Koyukuk Drive, Fairbanks,
AK, USA). Acknowledgements: The Inuvik fixed-gap imaging Fabry-Perot Spectrometer is operated
by the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska in collaboration with Environment Canada.
Initial funding came from the Aeronomy Program of the National Science Foundation (NSF), with
additional support from the joint TIME/CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) and NSF.

20
rfp (5335) are FPI red line data from Resolute Bay, Canada (74.73N, 94.89W; 83.1 magN at 87 m
above msl), which has been operated since 2003 by the National Center For Atmospheric Research. The
red line data from October 2003 to April 2005 are in the CEDAR Database, while green line and [OH]
data are available from the contact person. The contact person is Qian Wu (qwu@ucar.edu; Tel: (303)
497-2176, Fax: (303) 497-1589; High Altitude Observatory, National Center for Atmospheric Research,
P. O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307, USA). Acknowledgements: The Resolute Bay Canada Fabry-
Perot Spectrometer is operated by the High Altitude Observatory of the National Center for Atmospheric
Research with support from the National Science Foundation. Surface observations were supplied by
Environment Canada.

tfp (5540) are FPI red line data from Thule (Qaanaaq), Greenland (76.53N, 68.44W; 84.6 magN), which
was operated intermittantly by the University of Michigan between 1984 and 1994. Data between
September 1987 and March 1989 are in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Rick Niciejewski
(niciejew@umich.edu; Tel: (734) 647-3445, Fax: (734) 763-0437; Space Physics Laboratory, University
of Michigan, 2455 Hayward St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109). Acknowledgements: The Thule Fabry-Perot is
operated by the University of Michigan with support from the National Science Foundation and from the
Air Force Research Laboratory, which is operated by the United States Air Force. Former names for the
Air Force Research Laboratory are: Phillips Laboratory, Geophysics Laboratory, and the Air Force
Geophysics Laboratory.

pfp (5300) are FPI green line and OH data from Peach Mountain, USA (42.4N, 83.96W; 53.6 magN),
which has been operated intermittantly by the University of Michigan since 1989. Data from May 1993
through March 1994 are in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Rick Niciejewski
(niciejew@umich.edu; Tel: (734) 647-3445, Fax: (734) 763-0437; Space Physics Laboratory, University
of Michigan, 2455 Hayward St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109). Acknowledgements: The Peach Mountain
Fabry-Perot was built with funds from the College of Engineering of the University of Michigan, and is
supported by funding from the National Science Foundation and the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.

IR Michelson Interferometers

Neutral temperatures around 87 km derived from nightglow hydroxyl OH (892 nm) measurements are
also available from IR Michelson Interferometers (MIs). The other basic parameter is brightness. The IR
Michelson Interferometer data are listed in the Optical Daily Listing. Many MIs are a part of the
TIMED-CEDAR Data System. Figure 3 shows recent [OH] temperatures for March 2002 from the
Sondre Stromfjord MI. References for the Michelson Interferometer are

Espy, P. J., W. R. Pendleton, Jr., G. G. Sivjee and M. P. Fetrow, Vibrational development of the N2+
Meinel band system in the aurora, J. Geophys. Res., 92, 11,257-11,261, 1987.
Sivjee, G. G. and R. M. Hamwey, Temperature and chemistry of the polar mesopause OH, J. Geophys.
Res., 92, 4663-4672, 1987.

spm (5700) are OH data from South Pole, Antarctica (90.0S, 0.0E; 74.3 magS), which has been operated
since January 1992. Temperature data for May 1992, and winters between 1995-1999 and 2002-2003 are
in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is G. G. Sivjee (sivjee@db.erau.edu; Tel: (386) 226-6711;
Fax: (386) 226-6713; Physical Sciences Department, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical university, 600 S.
Clyde Morris Boulevard, Daytona Beach, FL 32119, USA). Acknowledgements: The South Pole
21
Michelson Interferometer is operated by the Space Physics Research Laboratory of Embry-Riddle
Aeronautical University (ERAU) with support from the Office of Polar Programs at the National
Science Foundation (NSF). It is a designated Ground Based Instrument for the TIMED satellite mission,
with additional funding from TIMED/CEDAR at NASA.

dbm (5720) are OH data from Daytona Beach, Florida, USA (29.19N, 81.05W; 40.7 magN), which has
been operated since September 1996. Temperature data for February through August 1991 are in the
CEDAR Database. The contact person is G. G. Sivjee (sivjee@db.erau.edu; Tel: (386) 226-6711; Fax:
(386) 226-6713; Physical Sciences Department, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical university, 600 S. Clyde
Morris Boulevard, Daytona Beach, FL 32119, USA). Acknowledgements: The Daytona Beach
Michelson Interferometer is operated by the Space Physics Research Laboratory of Embry-Riddle
Aeronautical University (ERAU) with support from ERAU. It is a designated Ground Based Instrument
for the TIMED satellite mission, with additional funding from TIMED/CEDAR at NASA.

stm (5860) are OH data from Stockholm, Sweden (59.5N, 18.2E; 55.8 magN), which has been operated
by the University of Utah and Stockholm University since 1991. Data between May 1993 and December
1994 are in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Patrick Espy (p.espy@bas.ac.uk; Tel: (44)
1223-221-255; Fax: (44) 1223-221-226; Physical Sciences Division, British Antarctic Survey, High
Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge, CB3 OET, England). Acknowledgements: The Stockholm IR
Michelson Interferometer is operated by the Utah State University and the Meteorological Institute of
Stockholm University with support from the National Science Foundation and the University of
Stockholm.

Figure 3: Neutral temperatures around 87 km from the [OH] (3,1) band from Sondre Stromfjord during
March, 2001. The dotted line is the time of local midnight.
22
sfm (5900) are OH data from Sondrestrom Fjord, Greenland (66.99N, 50.95W; 72.9 magN), which has
been operated since September 1990. Temperature data between September 1997 and April 2002 are in
the CEDAR Database. The contact person is G. G. Sivjee (sivjee@db.erau.edu; Tel: (386) 226-6711;
Fax: (386) 226-6713; Physical Sciences Department, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical university, 600 S.
Clyde Morris Boulevard, Daytona Beach, FL 32119, USA). Acknowledgements: The Sondrestrom
Fjord Michelson Interferometer is operated by the Space Physics Research Laboratory of Embry-Riddle
Aeronautical University (ERAU) with support from the Aeronomy and Polar Programs at the National
Science Foundation (NSF). It is a designated Ground Based Instrument for the TIMED satellite mission,
with additional funding from TIMED/CEDAR at NASA.

rbm (5950) are OH data from Resolute Bay, Canada (74.68N, 94.90W; 83.2 magN), which has been
operated since September 1996. Temperature data between October and December 1996, and
temperature and brightness data for January 2001 are in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is G.
G. Sivjee (sivjee@db.erau.edu; Tel: (386) 226-6711; Fax: (386) 226-6713; Physical Sciences
Department, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical university, 600 S. Clyde Morris Boulevard, Daytona Beach, FL
32119, USA). Acknowledgements: The Resolute Bay Michelson Interferometer is operated by the
Space Physics Research Laboratory of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (ERAU) with support
from ERAU and the Office of Polar Programs at the National Science Foundation (NSF). It is a
designated Ground Based Instrument for the TIMED satellite mission, with additional funding from
TIMED/CEDAR at NASA.

eum (5980) are OH data from Eureka, Canada (80.22N, 86.18W; 88.4 magN), which has been operated
since October 1992. Temperature data between October and November 1994 are in the CEDAR
Database. The contact person is G. G. Sivjee (sivjee@db.erau.edu; Tel: (386) 226-6711; Fax: (386)
226-6713; Physical Sciences Department, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical university, 600 S. Clyde Morris
Boulevard, Daytona Beach, FL 32119, USA). Acknowledgements: The Eureka Michelson
Interferometer is operated by the Space Physics Research Laboratory of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University (ERAU) with support from ERAU and the Office of Polar Programs at the National Science
Foundation (NSF). It is a designated Ground Based Instrument for the TIMED satellite mission, with
additional funding from TIMED/CEDAR at NASA.

Spectrometers

[OH] rotational temperatures from the hydroxyl nightglow around 87 km (+/-2 km) have been measured
starting in 1980 by the Czerny-Turner (CZT) grating spectrometer in Wuppertal, Germany in the form of
nightly temperature averages. The Davis, Antarctica CZT scanning spectrophotometer started taking
approximately hourly temperatures of [OH(6,2)] in 1990, with data approximately every 7 minutes in
the night starting in 1997. The dates with available nighttime [OH] spectrometer temperatures are listed
in the Optical Daily Listing.

dvs (3010) are neutral nighttime mesospheric temperatures from ratios of the hydroxyl [OH(6-2)] band
from the Davis, Antarctica (68.48S, 77.97E; 81.7 magS) Czerny-Turner scanning spectrophotometer.
The spectrophotometer was in campaign operation March to October 1990 and April to August 1994,
and has had continuous winter operations since March 1995. Temperatures are derived as a weighted
average of rotational temperatures from the 3 ratios of P1(2)/P1(4), P1(2)/P1(5) and P1(4)/P1(5) from
consecutive scans. Initially, scans were about 11 min each, and 5 scans were averaged together for a
time cadence of almost 1 hour. Since 1997, scans are about 7 min apart, and consecutive scans are
interpolated for values approximately every 14 min. Nighttime temperature averages are also available.
The website is http://its-db.aad.gov.au/proms/public/report_project_public.cfm?project_no=701. The
23
AADC (Australian Antarctic Divisions Data Center) contains the data and descriptions under the project
number ASAC (Australian Science Advisory Committee) 701 at: http://aadc-db.antdiv.gov.au/cgi-
bin/zgate?present+21254+Default+1+1+F+1.2.840.10003.5.1000.34.10+Davis_OH_airglow. The
contact person is John French (john.french@aad.gov.au; Tel: (+61) 3-62-323-480; Fax: (+61) 3-62-
323-496; Australian Antarctic Division, Channel Highway, Kingston, 7050, Tasmania, Australia).
Acknowledgements: The Davis Czerny-Turner scanning spectrophotometer is operated by members of
the Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition and supported by the Antarctic Science Advisory
Committee and the Australian Antarctic Division.

wup (3320) are nightly [OH] rotational neutral temperature averages from Wuppertal, Germany (51.3N,
7.2E; 47.6 magN) measured by the Czerny-Turner grating spectrometer. Rotational temperatures are
derived from the relative intensities of three wavelengths approximately every 90 sec. The spectrometer
has been operated by the University of Wuppertal ( http://www.grips.uni-wuppertal.de) since 1980 with
a gap in 1985-1986. Nightly average temperatures between July 1980 and Dec 2006 are in the CEDAR
Database. The contact person is Peter Knieling (knieling@uni-wuppertal.de; Tel: (49) 202-439-2749;
Fax: (49) 202-439-2680; Physics Department (D 07.07), University of Wuppertal, Gaussstrasse 20, D-
42097 Wuppertal, Germany). Acknowledgements: The Wuppertal OH Spectrometer is operated by the
University of Wuppertal.

Airglow Imagers and All-Sky Cameras

Brightness is the basic parameter for imagers. Some nightly rotational temperatures from [OH] around
87 km and from [O2] around 94 km from the Mesospheric Temperature Mapper are in the CEDAR
Database, but other image data are not in digital form in the Database, and so they do not appear in the
inventory listing. The data reside with the contact person. Usually, only a catalogue of dates is available,
but there are video tapes at the Database from the imager at Millstone Hill. However, CEDAR/TIMED
imagers will be included in FITS format as part of the CEDAR Database in the future. References for
imagers and all-sky cameras are

Fukui, K., J. Buchau, and C. E. Valladeres, Convection of polar cap patches observed at Qaanaaq,
Greenland during the winter of 1989-1990, Radio Sci., 29, 231-248, 1994.
Mendillo, M., J. Baumgardner, J. Aarons, J. Foster, and J. Klobuchar, Coordinated optical and radio
studies of ionospheric disturbances: Initial results from Millstone Hill, Annales Geophysicae, 5A, 543-
550, 1987.
Valladares, C. E., H. C. Carlson Jr., and K. Fukui, Interplanetary magnetic field dependency of stable
sun-aligned polar cap arcs, J. Geophys. Res., 99, 6247-6272, 1994.

mtm (7191) is the code for the Utah State University Mesospheric Temperature Mapper (MTM), a CCD
imager with a 75 degree field of view that measures the hydroxyl [OH] Meinel and the [O2] nightglow
and rotational temperatures. Three wavelengths (a doublet and a background wavelength) are used to
determine the rotational temperature of [OH] (from 840.0 nm and 846.5 nm) and [O2] (from 866.0 nm
and 868.0 nm). Nightly averages of [OH] temperatures for nights with at least 4 hours of observations
were determined for 64 of 145 nights when the MTM was was located at Fort Collins, Colorado
(40.590N, 105.140W; 49.7 magN). The MTM was upgraded to add an [O2] filter for emissions peaking
around 94 km, and then moved to Maui, Hawaii (20.75N, 156.24W; 21.8 magN), where average (1 or
more hours) nighttime [OH] and [O2] temperatures and brightnesses have been made available to the
CEDAR-TIMED team and the CEDAR Database since January 2002. A list of observing nights for the
MTM while it was at Fort Collins, and also when it was at Bear Lake, Utah (41.933 N, 111.417 W; 49.9
magN), are given in the Mesospheric Temperature Mapper Listing. The Maui observing dates are listed
24
in the Combined Daily Listing for Optical Instruments, along with the Fort Collins nights with at least 4
hours of good observations. The contact person is Michael Taylor ( mtaylor@cc.usu.edu; Tel: (435)
797-3919; Fax: (435) 797-2992; Center for Atmospheric and Space Sciences, Utah State University,
4405 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322-4405, USA). Acknowledgements: The Utah State University
Mesospheric Temperature Mapper is operated by the Utah State University with support from the
National Science Foundation.

usi (7190) is the code for the Utah State University CCD imager. From Oct 6-23, 1993 during the
Aloha'93 campaign, the USU imager measured OH, O2(0,1), OI, and Na nightglow emissions over
Hawaii (20N, 155W; 20.6 magN). These data are available from Michael Taylor
(mtaylor@cc.usu.edu). Acknowledgements: The Utah State University CCD Imager is operated by the
Utah State University with support from the National Science Foundation.

mhi (7200, 7240) are the codes for the Boston University Mobile Ionospheric Observatory (MIO)
imaging system (7200) which ran from April 1985 to June 1989, and the CEDAR Imager (7240) which
started in September 1989. Both imagers were/are located at Millstone Hill (42.6N, 71.5W; 53.1 magN).
Video tapes of images from July 1987 to September 1994 are available at the CEDAR Database. The
original data and other periods can be obtained from Michael Mendillo (mendillo at bu.edu). A
complete list of observing and calibration dates for this and other optical instruments run by Boston
University are located on the web at http://www.buimaging.com/. On-line images include 557.7 and 630
nm all-sky imager data at Millstone Hill Massachusetts from 2001-2006, at Arecibo Puerto Rico from
2002-2005, and 630 nm images from El Leoncito Argentina from 2000-2003. Acknowledgements: The
CEDAR Imager is operated at Millstone Hill by Boston University with support from the National
Science Foundation.

sfi (7480) is the code for the Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (66.99N, 50.95W; 72.9 magN), All-Sky
Imager (ASI) which was turned over to SRI International in 1999. Previously, the imager was operated
at Sondre Stromfjord by Steve Mende (mende@ssl.berkeley.edu). The ASI observations since 1999 are
available on the web at http://isr.sri.com/instruments/allsky as JPEG renderings of all available raw
images, as well as summary MPEG movie loops. The imager operates whenever the solar zenith angle is
greater than 105 degrees and the moon is down, regardless of the weather. The filters used and the UT
days where there are any images is listed in the Sondrestrom All-Sky Imager Listing. The contact person
is Rick Doe ( rick.doe@sri.com; Tel: (650) 859-2165; Fax: (650) 322-2318; SRI International, Center
for Geospace Studies, 333 Ravenswood Avenue, Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA). Acknowledgements:
The Sondre Stromfjord all-sky imager is supported by the National Science Foundation.

qac (7580), lnc (7591, 7600) and noc (7610) are the codes for the all-sky cameras at Qaanaaq,
Greenland (7580) (77.5N, 69.2W; 85.5 magN), at Longyearbyen, Svalbard (7591) (78.2N, 15.4E; 75.1
magN), at Ny Alesund, Svalbard (7600) (78.9N, 12.0E; 76.0 magN), and at Nord, Greenland (7610)
(81.60N, 16.6W; 80.8 magN). These all-sky cameras are operated by the Air Force Research Laboratory
at Hanscom Air Force Base in Massachusetts. The camera at Longyearbyen was moved to Ny Alesund
in February 1984. All the film files are available from Katsura Fukui (fukui@plh.af.mil). The All-Sky
Camera Listing gives the dates of the film files from Qaanaaq and Ny Alesund (1983-1991), and from
Nord (1989-1991). A 'D' or an 'F' next to the Qaanaaq listing indicates if there were digisonde or Fabry-
Perot data available in the CEDAR Database. Acknowledgements: The Qaanaaq and Nord all-sky
cameras are operated by the Danish Meteorological Institute and owned by the US Air Force Research
Laboratory at Hanscom Air Force Base. The Ny Alesund all-sky camera is operated by the University of
Oslo and owned by the US Air Force Research Laboratory at Hanscom Air Force Base.

25
Lidar

The lidar basic parameters are photocounts, relative neutral number density from Rayleigh lidars, or
sodium or iron density depending on the wavelength used. If two wavelengths are used, neutral
temperatures can be derived, and if three, then line-of-sight winds can be derived from the lidar.
Temperatures and vertical winds are available in the CEDAR Database from 1996-1998 from the
sodium lidar at Urbana between about 80 and 105 km. A similar height range of temperatures is
available from the Fort Collins sodium lidar, while the the Logan Rayleigh lidar gives temperatures from
about 45 to 90 km. Six articles in a special issue on LIDAR applications are located in
Proceedings of the IEEE, 77, pp. 408-490, March, 1989.
A list of all current lidars is maintained by ICLAS (International Coordination-group on Laser
Atmospheric Studies) at Hampton University at http://iclas.hamptonu.edu.

uil (6300) are Rayleigh/sodium and iron lidar data taken with the University of Illinois lidar. The
sodium lidar operated in January-April, 1989 during the AIDA campaign at Arecibo (18.35N, 66.75W;
29.1 magN) and flew in a plane over Hawaii (20N, 155W; 20.6 magN) during the ALOHA'90 campaign
in March and April. The iron lidar was operating at Urbana, Illinois (40.1N, 88.1W; 51.2 magN) during
October 1989 and March 1991 to August 1992. The lidar was then operated at Illinois using 2 or 3
wavelengths during the day and night from October 1995 to April 1998 before it was moved to the
Starfire Optical Range in May 1998. Days of data in the CEDAR Database are listed in the Optical
Daily Listing. The University of Illinois lidar and imager site is http://eosl.csl.uiuc.edu/, and shows plots
from special campaigns like ALOHA'93 and the Starfire Optical Range. The contact person is Chester
Gardner (cgardner@uiuc.edu; Tel (217) 333-4682, FAX (217) 333-4303; Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering, 315 CSRL, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801-2307).
Acknowledgements: The University of Illinois CEDAR lidar is operated by the University of Illinois
with support from the National Science Foundation.

csl (6320) are sodium lidar data taken with the Colorado State University lidar located at Fort Collins,
Colorado (40.59N, 105.14W; 49.5 magN). The lidar first operated in 1990 using 2 frequencies to get the
sodium density and the neutral temperature. In 2001, 3 frequencies were used to obtain the neutral line-
of-sight velocity. With 2 telescopes, and assuming zero vertical winds, then both components of the
horizontal neutral wind can be obtained. In April 2002, daytime observations were begun using a
Faraday filter. The CEDAR Database contains older data from 1993, and the new data beginning in
January 2002 for the CEDAR/TIMED mission. These dates are listed in the Optical Daily Listing. The
Colorado State University lidar and imager site is http://lamar.colostate.edu/~lidar. The operational
dates for the lidar are listed in the Colorado State University Lidar Listing, where an asterisk indicates
overlap with observations from the Utah State University Mesospheric Temperature Mapper. These
dates are also listed on the web at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/instruments/csldates.html with their
beginning and end times.

The nightly photofiles of 417 of these dates between March 1990 and March 1999 have been smoothed
with Hanning Windows in the vertical to derive the temperature at 87+/-1.85 km from the lidar for
comparison with [OH] optical instruments. These 417 nights were also ordered in day number and
smoothed to derive climatological temperatures and sodium densities as a function of height for every
day of the year. The climatological year is taken to be 1995, since it is in the midpoint of the data set.
The contact person is Chiao-Yao She (joeshe@lamar.colostate.edu; Tel (970) 491-7947, FAX (970)
491-6261; Physics Department, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523). A web site is
located at http://lamar.colostate.edu/~lidar. Acknowledgements: The Colorado State University

26
sodium lidar is operated by the Colorado State University with support from the National Science
Foundation.

usl (6330) are Rayleigh lidar data taken with the Utah State University lidar located at Logan, Utah
(41.74N, 111.81W; 49.6 magN). The lidar started operations in August 1993, with relatively regular
operations up to the present except between April 1997 and May 1998. A single test night for 13
October 1998 is in the CEDAR Database and is listed in the Optical Daily Listing. The contact person is
Vincent Wickwar (wickwar@aeronomy.cass.usu.edu; Tel (435) 797-3641, FAX (435) 797-2992;
Center for Atmospheric and Space Sciences, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322-4405). The web
site is at http://www.usu.edu/alo. Acknowledgements: The Utah State University Rayleigh lidar is
operated by the Utah State University with support from the National Science Foundation.

4-Channel Photometers

The 4-channel photometer basic parameters are photocounts from the 4 channels corresponding to: N2+
1NG (427.8 nm), OI (630.0 nm), OI (844.6 nm), and N2 1PG (871.0 nm). The N2+ blue channel is
directly related to the auroral electron enery flux, while various ratios of other channels are related to the
auroral electron mean energy and the amount of atomic oxygen in a model atmosphere, which are all
derived parameters. References for the technique are found in
Hecht, J. H., A. B. Christensen, D. J. Strickland, R. R. Meier, Deducing composition and incident
electron spectra from ground-based auroral optical measurements: Variations in oxygen density, J.
Geophys. Res., 94, 13,553-13,563, 1989.
Strickland, D. J., R. R. Meier, J. H. Hecht and A. B. Christensen, Deducing composition and incident
electron spectra from ground-based auroral optical measurements: Theory and model results, J.
Geophys. Res., 94, 13,527-13,539, 1989.

p4p (4470) produce estimated values of the auroal energy flux, mean auroral energy, and the
multiplicative factor for [O] in a MSIS model during clear nighttime auroral conditions at Poker Flat
(65.12N, 147.43W; 65.4 magN). Plots from the instrument are generated each day are are available at
http://gedds.pfrr.alaska.edu/aerospace/pokerflatdata. The contact person is James Hecht
(james.hecht@aero.org; Tel (310) 336-7017, FAX (310) 336-1636; The Aerospace Corporation, Space
and Environment Technical Center, M2-259, P. O. Box 92957, Los Angeles, CA 90009-1055, USA.)
Acknowledgements: The Aerospace 4 channel filter photometer at Poker Flat, Alaska was developed
and supported by the Aerospace Technical Investment Program and the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).

y4p (4473) is the 4-channel photometer at Fort Yukon, Alaska (66.57N, 147.27W; 66.9 magN). It
produces the same information as the instrument at Poker Flat. Plots from the instrument are generated
each day are are available at http://gedds.pfrr.alaska.edu/aerospace/fortyukondata. The contact person is
James Hecht (james.hecht@aero.org; Tel (310) 336-7017, FAX (310) 336-1636; The Aerospace
Corporation, Space and Environment Technical Center, M2-259, P. O. Box 92957, Los Angeles, CA
90009-1055, USA.) Acknowledgements: The Aerospace 4 channel filter photometer at Fort Yukon,
Alaska was developed and supported by the Aerospace Technical Investment Program and the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

27
Middle Atmosphere Radars

Middle atmosphere radars include MST radars, MF radars (partial reflection), LF radars, meteor wind
radars and ST radars with MEDAC (Meteor Echo Detection And Collection) systems. The Operational
Listing for MLT Radars lists the months that MLT data is available in the CEDAR Database. Six of the
22 MLT radars have only limited campaign data in the Database, so much more data are available from
the contact persons. MST radars have both a large altitude range and high time resolution data, but MF
or meteor wind radars usually find neutral winds between about 75 and 110 km, and average over
several days to get meaningful results which are harmonically analyzed. There are several MLT radars
coordinated for the TIMED-CEDAR community by Scott Palo (palo@colorado.edu; Tel (303) 492-
4289, FAX (303) 492-7881; University of Colorado, Aerospace Engineering Department, 429 UCB,
Boulder, CO 80309). Scott Palo calculates sliding 4-day harmonic analyses from original hourly wind
data. The web site is at http://sisko.colorado.edu/TIMED, while the harmonic analyses are also available
at http://www.timed.jhuapl.edu/register/index.html, which is the TIMED Mission Data Center at the
Applied Physics Laboratory. The harmonic analyses are also available in the CEDAR Database, along
with the winds that went to create these analyses from some of the radars. Acknowledgements for the
TIMED-CEDAR Harmonic Analysis : The MLT radar data analysis effort is funded by the National
Science Foundation (NSF) TIMED-CEDAR program grant number ATM-0000956.

MST Radars

The Arecibo and Poker Flat MST radars measure the basicS parameters of the line-of-sight neutral
winds and a measure of the turbulence (spectral width or velocity spread). Arecibo has high resolution
measurements between 6 and 21 km, while Poker Flat hourly averages are between approximately 5 and
120 km, with a gap between about 30 and 50 km. References for MST radars are

Balsley, B.B., W.L. Ecklund, D.A. Carter, and P.E. Johnson, The MST radar at Poker Flat, Alaska,
Radio Sci., 15, 213-223, 1980.
Hardy, K.R. and K.S. Gage, The history of radar studies of the clear atmosphere, chapter 17 of Radar in
Meteorology, editor D. Atlas, Am. Meteorological Soc., Boston, 130-142, 1990.
Rottger, J., The MST radar technique, Handbook for MAP, Vol. 13, 187-232, 1984.

arm (1040) are 1 min MST data from the March-May 1989 AIDA campaign at Arecibo, Puerto Rico
(18.35N, 66.75W; 29.1 magN). Arecibo MST Radar was operated by Cornell University since 1979.
Data from 1989 is currently in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Mike Sulzer
(msulzer@naic.edu; Tel (787) 878-2612x258, FAX (787) 878-1861; Arecibo Observatory, PO Box 995,
Arecibo, Puerto Rico 00612). A description of the site is at http://www.naic.edu/aomenu.htm.
Acknowledgements: The Arecibo Observatory is operated by Cornell University under cooperative
agreement with the National Science Foundation.

pkr (1140) are hourly MST data from Poker Flat, Alaska (65.13N,147.46W; 65.2 magN). Poker Flat
was operated between February 1979 and June 1985 by the Aeronomy Laboratory at NOAA in Boulder.
This is the data that is currently in the CEDAR Database. The University of Alaska then operated Poker
Flat from 1985 to 1987, after which it was torn down. The contact person is David Carter
(dcarter@al.noaa.gov; Tel (303) 497-5476, FAX (303) 497-5373; NOAA Aeronomy Lab, Mail Stop
R/E/AL3, 325 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80303). Acknowledgements: The Poker Flat MST radar was
operated by the NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Aeronomy Laboratory with
support from the National Science Foundation.

28
MF Radars

The neutral wind data from the MF, LF and meteor wind radars in the Data Base are averaged over
several days and analyzed in terms of harmonics. Derived parameters of the harmonic analyses of the
neutral winds are available for LTCS-1 (Sep 21-25, 1987), LTCS-2 (Dec 4-10, 1988), LTCS-3 (May 30
- June 4, 1989), and LTCS-4 (Feb 12- 17, 1990) from most of these radars, and several radars have years
of data in the CEDAR Database. There are several MF radars in TIMED-CEDAR. References for MF
radars are

Briggs, B. H., The analysis of spaced sensor records by correlation techniques, Handbook for Middle
Atmosphere Program, Vol. 13, 166-186, 1984.
Fraser, G. J., Partial-reflection spaced antenna wind measurements, Chapter 15 of Ground-based
techniques, Handbook for Middle Atmosphere Program, Vol. 13, 233-247, 1984.
Gregory, J. B., C. E. Meek, A. H. Manson and D. G. Stephenson, Developments in the radiowave drifts
technique for measurement of high-altitude winds, J. Applied Met., 18, 682-691, 1979.
Meek, C. E., An efficient method for analysing ionospheric drifts data, J. Atmos. Terr. Phys., 42, 835-
839, 1980.

sbf (1210) are MF radar data from Scott Base, Antarctica (77.85S, 166.75E; 74.5 magS), operated since
1982 by the University of Canterbury, New Zealand. Data from LTCS-2, 3 and 4 are currently in the
CEDAR Database. The contact person is Grahame Fraser (g.fraser@phys.canterbury.ac.nz; Tel: (64)
3-642-581, Fax: (64) 3-642-999; Physics Department, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New
Zealand). Acknowledgements: The Scott Base MF radar is operated by the University of Canterbury
Physics Department with support from the New Zealand University Grants Committee and the New
Zealand Antarctic Research Programme.

dav (1215) are MF radar data from Davis, Antarctica (68.60S, 77.97E; 61.4 magS), operated by
University of Adelaide since April 1994. Hourly neutral horizontal winds between 50 and 98 km for
2002-3 are in the CEDAR Database. Hourly winds such as these are the basis of the TIMED-CEDAR
harmonic analysis in 2002 and in 2003 up to day 119, which are also in the CEDAR Database. The
contact person is Robert Vincent (robert.vincent@adelaide.edu.au; Tel: (61) 8-8303-5758, Fax: (61) 8-
8303-4384; Department of Physics and Math Physics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, 5005,
Australia.) Acknowledgements: The Davis MF radar is operated by the Atmospheric Physics Group of
the University of Adelaide with support from the Australian Research Council. Logistical support is
provided by the Australian Science Advisory Committee and the Australian Antarctic Division. The MF
radar contributes data as part of the joint TIMED-CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) and the National Science Foundation (NSF).

maf (1220) are MF radar data from Mawson, Antarctica (67.62S, 62.89E; 70.2 magS), operated by
University of Adelaide since 1984. Mean winds every 12 days from June 1984 to November 1990 are in
the CEDAR Database along with data from LTCS-1 and 3. The contact person is Robert Vincent
(robert.vincent@adelaide.edu.au; Tel: (61) 8-8303-5758, Fax: (61) 8-8303-4384; Department of Physics
and Math Physics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, 5005, Australia.) Acknowledgements: The
Mawson MF radar is operated by the Atmospheric Physics Group, University of Adelaide with support
from the Australian Research Council. Logistical support is provided by the Australian Antarctic
Division.

rth (1221) are MF radar data from Rothera, Antarctica (67.57S, 68.12W; 71.6 magS), operated by
Colorado Research Associates since 2002 after initial operations in 1997-1998. It is one of the TIMED-
29
CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic analyses of the winds from 2002 to 2004. The contact person is
Dennis Riggin (riggin@colorado-research.com; Tel: (303) 415-9701x208, Fax: (303) 415-9702;
Colorado Research Associates, 3380 Mitchell Lane, Boulder, CO 80301, USA). Acknowledgements:
The Rothera MF radar is jointly operated by Colorado Research Associates and the British Antarctic
Survey with support from the Division of Polar Programs at the National Science Foundation (NSF) and
the UK Natural Environment Council. It contributes data as part of the joint TIMED-CEDAR program
of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and NSF.

ccf (1230) are MF radar data from Christchurch, New Zealand (43.83S, 172.68E; 50.4 magS), operated
by the University of Canterbury, New Zealand since 1962 (with gaps). Data from LTCS-1 are in the
CEDAR Database. The contact person is Grahame Fraser (g.fraser@phys.canterbury.ac.nz; Tel: (64)
3-642-581, Fax: (64) 3-642-999; Physics Department, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New
Zealand). Acknowledgements: The Christchurch MF radar is operated by the University of Canterbury
Physics Department with support from the New Zealand University Grants Committee.

adf (1240) are MF radar data from Adelaide, Australia (34.56S, 138.48E; 45.9 magS), operated by
University of Adelaide since 1983. Data from LTCS-1, 2 and 3 are in the CEDAR Database. Hourly
neutral horizontal winds between 60 and 98 km from Jan 2002 to Jun 2004 are also in the CEDAR
Database. These hourly winds are the basis of the TIMED-CEDAR harmonic analysis between 2002 and
2004, which are also in the CEDAR Database. The contact person is Robert Vincent
(robert.vincent@adelaide.edu.au; Tel: (61) 8-8303-5758, Fax: (61) 8-8303-4384; Department of Physics
and Math Physics, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, 5005, Australia). Acknowledgements: The
Adelaide MF radar is operated by the Atmospheric Physics Group, University of Adelaide with support
from the Australian Research Council. It contributes data as part of the joint TIMED-CEDAR program
of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Science Foundation
(NSF).

rtg (1245) are MF radar data from Rarotonga, Cook Islands (21.21S, 159.77W; 22.9 magS), operated by
Colorado Research Associates since 2000. It is one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic
analyses of the winds from Jan 2002 to Dec 2003, and from May-July 2004. The contact person is
Dennis Riggin (riggin@colorado-research.com; Tel: (303) 415-9701x208, Fax: (303) 415-9702;
Colorado Research Associates, 3380 Mitchell Lane, Boulder, CO 80301, USA). Acknowledgements:
The Rarotonga MF radar is operated by Colorado Research Associates with initial support from the
National Science Foundation (NSF) and current support from the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) as a Ground-Based Instrument for the TIMED satellite mission, which is part of
the joint TIMED-CEDAR program of NASA and NSF.

tir (1254) are hourly MF radar data from Tirunelveli, India (8.67N, 77.82E; 6.8 magN), operated by the
Indian Institute of Geomagnetism since December 1992. The hourly horizontal winds are available for
31 Dec 2001 to 31 Dec 2002 (missing days: 22 Feb - 5 Mar, 13-31 Mar, 7-10 Apr, 30 Apr, 22-27 Jun,
20-22 Aug, 30 Aug, 13-16 Sep, 18 Sep - 9 Oct, 16-22 Nov). It is also one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT
radars, but harmonic analyses of the winds are not yet available. The contact person is S. Gurubaran
(gurubara@iig.iigm.res.in; Tel: (0091)-462-573305, Fax: (0091)-462-573306, Indian Institute of
Geomagnetism, Equatorial Geophysical Research Laboratory, Krishnapuram, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu
627 011, India. Acknowledgements: The Tirunelveli MF radar is operated by the Indian Institute of
Geomagnetism, Mumbai with financial support from the Department of Science and Technology,
Government of India.

30
kau (1270) are MF radar data from Kauai, Hawaii, USA (22.0N, 159.3W; 22.6 magN), operated by
Colorado Research Associates since 1990. It is one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic
analyses of the winds from Sep 1990 to Dec 2004. The contact person is Dennis Riggin
(riggin@colorado-research.com; Tel: (303) 415-9701x208, Fax: (303) 415-9702; Colorado Research
Associates, 3380 Mitchell Lane, Boulder, CO 80301, USA). Acknowledgements: The Kauai, Hawaii
MF radar is operated by Colorado Research Associates with initial support from the National Science
Foundation (NSF) and current support from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) as a Ground-Based Instrument for the TIMED satellite mission, which is part of the joint
TIMED-CEDAR program of NASA and NSF.

yam (1275) are MF radar data from Yamagawa, Japan (31.20 N, 130.62 E; 24.1 magN), operated by the
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology in Japan since 1994. It is one of the
TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic analyses of the horizontal winds in 2001-2004 (up to day
32). The CEDAR Database also contains the hourly neutral winds from Sep 1998 to Dec 2002. The
contact person is Yasuhiro Murayama (murayama@nict.go.jp; Tel: (81) 42-327-6685, Fax: (81) 42-
327-6678; National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, International Arctic
Environment Research Group, 4-2-1 Nukui-kita-Machi, Koganei-shi, Tokyo 184-8795, Japan).
Acknowledgements: The Yamagawa MF radar is operated by the Institute of Information and
Communications Technology (previously Communications Research Laboratory), Japan. It contributes
data as part of the joint TIMED-CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) and the National Science Foundation (NSF).

plr (1285) are MF radar data from Platteville, Colorado, USA (40.18N, 104.7W; 49.3 magN), operated
by the University of Colorado and the University of Saskatchewan since December 1999. It has a web
site at http://grison.colorado.edu/Radar_Stations/Platteville/Platte2MHzMH.html. It is one of the
TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic analyses of the winds in 2002 between days 1-87 (missing
58-72). The contact persons are Alan Manson (alan.manson@usask.ca; Tel: (306) 966-6449, Fax:
(306) 966-6400; Inst of Space and Atmos Studies, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada) and
Denise Thorsen (ffdt@uaf.edu; Tel: (907) 474-7052, Fax: (907) 474-5135; University of Alaska -
Fairbanks, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, P. O. Box 755915, Fairbanks, Alaska
99775-5915, USA). Acknowledgements: The Platteville MF radar is operated collaboratively between
the University of Colorado (Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, CIRES) and
the University of Saskatchewan (Institute of Space and Atmospheric Studies, ISAS) with support from
the National Science Foundation (NSF) of the USA and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council (NSERC) of Canada. It contributes data as part of the joint TIMED-CEDAR program of the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and NSF.

wak (1310) are MF radar data from Wakkanai, Japan (45.36 N, 141.81 E; 38.9 magN), operated by the
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology in Japan since 1996. It is one of the
TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic analyses of the horizontal winds in 2001-2005 (up to day
62). The CEDAR Database also has the hourly neutral winds from Jan 1998 to Dec 2002. The contact
person is Yasuhiro Murayama (murayama@nict.go.jp; Tel: (81) 42-327-6685, Fax: (81) 42-327-6678;
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, International Arctic Environment
Research Group, 4-2-1 Nukui-kita-Machi, Koganei-shi, Tokyo 184-8795, Japan). Acknowledgements:
The Wakkanai MF radar is operated by the Institute of Information and Communications Technology
(previously Communications Research Laboratory), Japan. It contributes data as part of the joint
TIMED-CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the
National Science Foundation (NSF).

31
saf (1340) are MF radar data from Saskatoon, Canada (52.21N, 107.11W; 60.8 magN), operated by the
University of Saskatchewan since 1978. Data from LTCS-1, 2, 3 and 4 are in the CEDAR Database. It is
also one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic analyses of the winds from Jan 2002 to Oct
2005. The contact person is Alan Manson (alan.manson@usask.ca; Tel: (306) 966-6449, Fax: (306)
966-6400; Inst of Space and Atmos Studies, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada).
Acknowledgements: The Saskatoon MF radar is operated by the University of Saskatchewan (Institute
of Space and Atmospheric Studies) with support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada (NSERC). It contributes data as part of the joint TIMED-CEDAR program of the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Science Foundation (NSF).

rpk (1375) are MF radar data from Poker Flat, Alaska, USA (65.126 N, 147.495 W; 65.4 magN),
operated by the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology in Japan since 1998
with collaboration with the Geophysical Institute in Alaska. It is one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT
radars, with harmonic analyses of the horizontal winds in 2001-2005 (up to day 153). The CEDAR
Database also has the hourly winds from Oct 1998 to May 2004. The contact person is Yasuhiro
Murayama (murayama@nict.go.jp; Tel: (81) 42-327-6685, Fax: (81) 42-327-6678; National Institute of
Information and Communications Technology, International Arctic Environment Research Group, 4-2-1
Nukui-kita-Machi, Koganei-shi, Tokyo 184-8795, Japan). Acknowledgements: The Poker Flat MF
radar is operated by the Institute of Information and Communications Technology (previously
Communications Research Laboratory), Japan, with collaboration with the Geophysical Institute of the
University of Alaska at Fairbanks. It contributes data as part of the joint TIMED-CEDAR program of
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National Science Foundation
(NSF).

trf (1390) are MF radar data from Tromsø, Norway (69.60N, 19.2E; 66.5 magN), operated the
University of Tromsø and University of Saskatchewan since 1987. Data from LTCS-1, 2, 3 and 4 are in
the CEDAR Database. It is also one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic analyses of the
winds from Jan 2002 to Sep 2005. The contact people are Chris Hall (for radar) (chris.hall@tgo.uit.no;
Tel: (47) 77-64-52-22, Department of Physics, University of Tromsø, N-9037 Tromsø, Norway) and
Alan Manson (for winds) (alan.manson@usask.ca; Tel: (306) 966-6449, Fax: (306) 966-6400; Inst of
Space and Atmos Studies, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada). Acknowledgements: The
Tromsø MF radar is operated by the University of Tromsø (Tromsø Geophysical Observatory) and the
University of Saskatchewan (Institute of Space and Atmospheric Studies) with support from the Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada. It contributes data as part of the joint
TIMED-CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the
National Science Foundation (NSF).

LF Radars

A reference for LF radars is

Schminder, R. and D. Kurschner, D1 LF wind measurements in the 90 to 100 km height range,


Handbook for Middle Atmosphere Program, Vol. 13, 248-261, 1984.

cof (1320) are LF radar data from Collm, Germany (52N, 15E; 47.7 magN), which has been operated by
the University of Leipzig since 1956. Data since 1993 are available at the CEDAR Database.
Climatological plots are available at http://www.uni-leipzig.de/~gasse/geo, and further data can be
requested. The contact person is Christoph Jacobi ( jacobi@rz.uni-leipzig.de; Tel (49) 341-9732876,
FAX (49) 341-9732899; Institute of Meteorology, University of Leipzig, Stephanstr. 3, D-04103
32
Leipzig, Germany). Acknowledgements: The Collm LF windprofiler is operated by the University of
Leipzig (Institute of Meteorology, Collm Geophysical Observatory).

Meteor Wind Radars

There are several meteor wind radars in the TIMED-CEDAR data system. References for meteor wind
radars are

Avery, S. K., J. P. Avery, and T. A. Valentic, A new meteor echo detection and collection system:
Christmas Island mesospheric winds measurements, Radio Sci., 25, 657-670, 1990.
Groves, G. V., A theory for determining upper atmosphere winds from radar observations on meteor
trails, J. Atmos. Terr. Phys., 16, 344-356, 1959.
McKinley, D. W. R., Meteor Science and Engineering, McGraw-Hill, 1961.
Roper, R. G., MWR - Meteor Wind Radars, Handbook for Middle Atmosphere Program, Vol. 13, 124-
134, 1984.

asc (1539) are meteor wind radar data from Ascension Island (7.96 S, 14.38 W; 19.6 magS), operated by
the University of Bath since August 1999. It is one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic
analyses of the winds in 2002 and 2003 (up to day 193). The contact person is Nicholas Mitchell
(n.j.mitchell@bath.ac.uk; Tel: (44) 1225-386826, Fax: (44) 1225-386305; University of Bath, Electronic
and Electrical Engineering, Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, United Kingdom). Acknowledgements:
The Ascension Island meteor radar is operated by the University of Bath, UK with support from The
Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council of the UK. It contributes data as part of the joint
TIMED-CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the
National Science Foundation (NSF).

cia (2090) are ST with MEDAC radar data from Christmas Island (1.95N, 157.3W; 3.0 magN), which
has been operated by the University of Colorado since 1988. Data between September 1988 and August
1989, and between January and November 1990 are in the CEDAR Database, but will be revised.
LTCS-2 and 3 data are also available. The contact person is Susan Avery
(savery@boulder.colorado.edu; Tel (303) 492-8773, FAX (303) 492-1149; University of Colorado,
Campus Box 216, Boulder, CO 80309-0216). Acknowledgements: The Christmas Island ST radar is
operated by NOAA's Aeronomy Laboratory in Boulder, Colorado. The MEDAC system is operated by
the University of Colorado with support from the National Science Foundation.

atm (1560) are meteor wind radar data from Atlanta, USA (34N, 84W; 45.4 magN), which has been
operated by Georgia Tech from 1974 - 1987. Data from 1974 - 1987 are available in the CEDAR
Database. The contact person is Robert G. Roper (rgroper@bellsouth.net; Tel: (404) 894-3892, Fax:
(404) 853-0232; Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332-
0340). Acknowledgements: The Georgia Tech Radio Meteor Wind Facility was initially funded by the
Georgia Institute of Technology. From 1971 to 1990, it was supported by the National Science
Foundation.

pla (2200) are ST with MEDAC radar data from Platteville, USA (40.13N, 104.5W; 49.1 magN), which
has been operated by the University of Colorado on a campaign basis since 1988. Data for the LTCS-2
campaign are in the Database. The contact person is Susan Avery (savery@boulder.colorado.edu; Tel
(303) 492-8773, FAX (303) 492-1149; University of Colorado, Campus Box 216, Boulder, CO 80309-
0216). Acknowledgements: The Platteville ST radar is operated by NOAA's Wave Propagation

33
Laboratory in Boulder, Colorado. The MEDAC system is operated by the University of Colorado with
support from the National Science Foundation.

dum (1620) are meteor wind radar data from Durham, USA (43.12N, 70.94W; 53.5 magN), which has
been operated by the University of New Hampshire since 1974. Monthly averages from 1978-1982,
which were combined into a single year average, are in the CEDAR Database as well as data from
LTCS-1, 2 and 4. The contact person is Ronald Clark (ron.clark@unh.edu; Tel: (603) 862-1357, Fax:
(603) 862-1832; University of New Hampshire, Kingsbury-ECE, Durham, NH 03824).
Acknowledgements: The University of New Hampshire Meteor Radar system is operated by the
Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH with
support from the National Science Foundation.

obn (1750) are single height meteor wind radar data from Obninsk, Russia (55.11N, 36.51E; 51.2
magN), in operation since 1964. It is one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with harmonic analyses
of the winds in 2002 between days 1-161 with intermittent missing days between 45-125. The contact
person is Yuri Portnyagin (yportgin@typhoon.obninsk.org; Tel: 7-08439-715-20, Fax: 7-08439-409-
10; Institute for Experimental Meteorology, Lenin str., 82, Obninsk, Kaluga region, Obninsk 249038,
Russia). Acknowledgements: The Obninsk meteor radar is operated by the Institute for Experimental
Meteorology with support from the Russian Hydrometeorological Service. It contributes data as part of
the joint TIMED-CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and
the National Science Foundation (NSF).

emr (1775) are meteor wind radar data from Esrange, Sweden (67.89N, 21.08E; 64.8 magN), operated
by the University of Bath since August 1999. It is one of the TIMED-CEDAR MLT radars, with
harmonic analyses of the winds in 2002-2004. The contact person is Nicholas Mitchell
(n.j.mitchell@bath.ac.uk; Tel: (44) 1225-386826, Fax: (44) 1225-386305; University of Bath, Electronic
and Electrical Engineering, Claverton Down, Bath BA2 7AY, United Kingdom). Acknowledgements:
The Esrange meteor radar is operated by the University of Bath, UK with support from The Particle
Physics and Astronomy Research Council of the UK. It contributes data as part of the joint TIMED-
CEDAR program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the National
Science Foundation (NSF).

Models

The CEDAR Database has information on some theoretical models available for community use and
source code for several empirical models.

Theoretical Models

A number of modellers have indicated that they would be willing to make their theoretical models
available to others. Interested users should contact the modeller and either work in close cooperation
with the modeller on selected studies, or use the model themselves. Two of these models, AMIE and
TIGCM, have also contributed output to the CEDAR Database, which are described in Large Model
Output.

AMIE: The Assimilative Mapping of Ionospheric Electrodynamics (AMIE) procedure relies on


relatively large amounts of data to produce electric fields and conductances. Inquiries can be directed to
34
Arthur Richmond (richmond@ucar.edu) or to Barbara Emery (emery@ucar.edu). There are a few
outside users who learned how to run AMIE while visiting NCAR.

CTIM and CTIP: The Coupled Thermosphere Ionosphere Model and Coupled Thermosphere
Ionosphere Plasmasphere model are global models of the thermosphere, ionosphere (CTIM) and
plasmasphere (CTIP) above 80 km. Those interested in doing collaborations on scientific investigations
using CTIM or CTIP please contact Tim Fuller-Rowell (tim.fuller-rowell@noaa.gov; Tel (303) 497-
5764, FAX (303) 497-3645; Space Environment Center, 325 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80303).
References for CTIM and CTIP are:

Fuller-Rowell, T. J., M. V. Codrescu, H. Rishbeth, R. J. Moffett and S. Quegan, Response of the


thermosphere and ionosphere to geomagnetic storms, J. Geophys. Res., 99, 3896-3914, 1994.
Fuller-Rowell, T. J., D. Rees, S. Quegan, R. J. Moffett, and M. V. Codrescu, A Coupled Thermosphere
Ionosphere Model (CTIM), The STEP Handbook, edited by R. W. Schunk, Utah State University, 217-
238, 1996.
Millward, G. H., R. J. Moffett, S. Quegan, and T. J. Fuller-Rowell, A Coupled Thermosphere
Ionosphere Plasmasphere model (CTIP), The STEP Handbook, edited by R. W. Schunk, Utah State
University, 239-280, 1996.
Millward, G. H., H. Rishbeth, T. J. Fuller-Rowell, A. Aylward, S. Quegan and R. J. Moffett, Ionospheric
F2 region seasonal and semi-annual variations, J. Geophys. Res., 100, 5149-5156, 1995.

FLIP: The Field Line Interhemispheric Plasma (FLIP) model solves for plasma densities and
temperatures along flux tubes. The executable code is available from Philip Richards
(richards@cs.uah.edu; Tel (256) 890-6433; Computer Science Department, University of Alabama at
Huntsville, 5000 Technolgy Drive, Huntsville, AL 35802). A reference for the FLIP model is

Richards, P. G., An improved algorithm for determining neutral winds from the height of the F2 peak
electron density, J. Geophys. Res., 96, 17,839-17,846, 1991.

GLOW: A thermospheric airglow model developed by Stan Solomon ( stans@ucar.edu; Tel (303)
497-2179, HAO/NCAR, 3450 Mitchell Lane, Boulder, CO 80301). A reference is

Solomon, S. C. and V. J. Abreu, The 630 nm Dayglow, J. Geophys. Res., 94, 6817-6824, 1989.

TIGCM, TIEGCM and TIMEGCM: The Thermosphere/Ionosphere General Circulation Model


(TIGCM) has been expanded to solve also for the electrodynamics (TIEGCM) in low and mid latitudes,
and extended to the mesosphere (TIMEGCM). Requests for generic conditions or simulations of specific
periods may be directed to Raymond Roble (roble@ucar.edu) or to Barbara Emery
(emery@ucar.edu).

TING: The Thermosphere-Ionosphere Nested Grid model started with the NCAR TIGCM and was
expanded to work on a nested grid by Wenbin Wang, (wbwang@ucar.edu; Tel (303) 497-2177,
HAO/NCAR, 3450 Mitchell Lane, Boulder, CO 80301), Timothy Killeen and Alan Burns. The nested
grid allows the medium scale features of the auroral oval and the electron density trough to be modelled
more accurately. A web page for several models including TING is located at
http://gandalf.engin.umich.edu. A reference is

35
Wang, W., T. K. Killeen, A. G. Burns and R. G. Roble, A high-resolution, three dimensional, time
dependent, nested grid model of the coupled thermosphere-ionosphere, J. Atmos. Solar-Terr. Phys., 61,
385-397, 1997.

VSH: The Vector Spherical Harmonic (VSH) produces thermospheric (110-1500 km) global neutral
winds based on TIGCM runs. Source code is available from the developer Timothy Killeen
(tkilleen@ucar.edu, NCAR Directors Office, P. O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307). A web page for
several models including VSH is located at http://gandalf.engin.umich.edu. A reference is

Killeen, T. L., R. G. Roble and N. W. Spencer, A computer model of global thermospheric winds and
temperatures, Adv. Space Res., Vol. 7, No. 10, 207-215, 1987.

Empirical Models

The source code for several empirical models is available from the CEDAR Database. Users should
acknowledge the CEDAR Database and use at least one of the given references in their bibliographies.
All source code is in Fortran, which was not always the original code for the models. In particular, all
the electric potential models were revised to accomodate a very similar calling program.

APEX: The APEX geomagnetic field model includes the IGRF/DGRF with updated coefficients and
full calculation or table look-ups to find the apex magnetic coordinates. References are

Richmond, A. D., Ionospheric electrodynamics using magnetic apex coordinates, J. Geomag. Geoelectr.,
47, 191-212, 1995.
VanZandt, T. E., W. L. Clark and J. M. Warnock, Magnetic apex coordinates: A magnetic coordinate
system for the ionospheric F2 layer, J. Geophys. Res., 77, 2406-2411, 1972.

CHIU: Chiu model electron densities are returned for input geographic latitude, longitude, height and
time. A reference is

Chiu, Y.T., An improved phenomenological model of ionospheric density,J. Atmos. Terr. Phys., 37,
1563-1570, 1975.

E FIELD: This model gives quiet-day ionospheric electrostatic potential and E X B drifts at 300 km for
magnetic latitudes below 60 degrees during polar minimum conditions. The reference is

Richmond, A. D., M. Blanc, B. A. Emery, R. H. Wand, B. G. Fejer, R. F. Woodman, S. Ganguly, P.


Amayenc, R. A. Behnke, C. Calderon, and J. V. Evans, An empirical model of quiet-day ionospheric
electric fields at middle and low latitudes, J. Geophys. Res., 85, 4658-4664, 1980.

HMR: These are electric potentials and fields defined by Rich and Maynard (1989) from patterns
described by Heppner and Maynard (1987). The references are

Heppner, J. P. and N. C. Maynard, Empirical high-latitude electric field models, J. Geophys. Res., 92,
4467-4489, 1987.
Rich, F. J. and N. C. Maynard, Consequences of using simple analytical functions for the high-latitude
convection electric field, J. Geophys. Res., 94, 3687-3701, 1989.

36
HPI: These are tables and interpolations of the NOAA satellite auroral electron flux, Pedersen and Hall
conductance, and characteristic energy based on the Hemispheric Power Index (HPI) described in
Fuller-Rowell and Evans (1987). An additional table of the approximate Maxwellian energy based on
the Hall/Pedersen ratio is also included. Conjugacy is assumed. The reference is

Fuller-Rowell, T. J. and D. S. Evans, Height-integrated Pedersen and Hall conductivity patterns inferred
from the TIROS-NOAA satellite data, J. Geophys. Res., 92, 7606-7618, 1987.

HWM: The Horizontal Wind Model (HWM93 or HWM90) gives neutral horizontal winds for input
geographic latitude, longitude, height and time. References are

Hedin, A. E., N. W. Spencer, and T. L. Killeen, Empirical global model of upper thermosphere winds
based on Atmosphere and Dynamics Explorer satellite data, J. Geophys. Res., 93, 9959-9978, 1988.
Hedin, A. E., M. A. Biondi, R. G. Burnside, G. Hernandez, R. M. Johnson, T. L. Killeen, C. Mazaudier,
J. W. Meriwether, J. E. Salah, R. J. Sica, R. W. Smith, N. W. Spencer, V. B. Wickwar, and T. S. Virdi,
Revised global model of thermosphere winds using satellite and ground based observations, J. Geophys.
Res., 96, 7657-7688, 1991.

IRI: The IRI 1990 model, and Version 9 (1986), returns neutral temperatures and ionospheric
parameters Ne, Te, Ti, and ion composition for input geographic latitude, longitude, height and time.
The IRI model is available at http://modelweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/. The fortran source code for IRI90, IRI95,
IRI2001 and IRI2005 are linked to this site, as are PC Windows versions and online computation and
plotting. References for the IRI90 model and a more recent IRI model are

Bilitza, D., International reference ionosphere: Recent developments, Radio. Sci., 21, 343-346, 1986.
Bilitza, D., International Reference Ionosphere 2000, Radio. Sci., 36, 261-275, 2001.
which are also available as .pdf files at the IRI web site.

IZMEM: Electric potentials and fields defined by Papitashvili et al. (1994). A web page for several
models including IZMEM is located at http://mist.engin.umich.edu/mist/limie.html. The reference is

Papitashvili, V. O., B. A. Belov, D. S. Faermark, Ya. I. Feldstein, S. A. Golyshev, L. I. Gromova, and


A. E. Levitin, Electric potential patterns in the northern and southern polar regions parameterized by the
interplanetary magnetic field, J. Geophys. Res., 99, 13,251-13,262, 1994.

MAGFLD: IGRF/DGRF geomagnetic field model for 1965-1995.

MH: Electric potentials and fields parameterized by HPI and Millstone Hill (MH) data described by
Foster et al (1986) or parameterized by IMF using Millstone and Sondrestrom data (Foster, 1987). The
references are

Foster, J. C., Radar deduced models of the convection electric field, Proceedings of the International
Symposium on Quanititative Modeling of Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling Processes, editors Y.
Kamide and R. A. Wolf, Kyoto, Japan, 71-76, 1987.
Foster, J. C., J. M. Holt, R. G. Musgrove, and D. S. Evans, Ionospheric convection associated with
discrete levels of particle precipitation, Geophys. Res. Lett., 13, 656-659, 1986.

MSIS: The MSIS 2000 (or 1983, 1986, or 1990) model returns neutral temperature and composition
values for input geographic latitude, longitude, height and time. Another name for the MSIS 2000 model
37
is NRLMSISE-00, and the latest version of the model can be obtained from http://uap-
www.nrl.navy.mil/models_web/msis/msis_home.htm. References are

Hedin, A.E., A revised thermospheric model based on mass spectrometer and incoherent scatter data:
MSIS-83, J. Geophys. Res., 88, 10170-10188, 1983.
Hedin, A.E., MSIS-86 thermospheric model, J. Geophys. Res., 92, 4649-4662, 1987.
Hedin, A.E., Extension of the MSIS model into the middle and lower atmosphere, J. Geophys. Res., 96,
1159-1172, 1991.
Picone, J. M., A. E. Hedin, D. P. Drob, and A. C. Aikin, NRLMSISE-00 empirical model of the
atmosphere: Statistical comparisons and scientific issues, J. Geophys. Res., 107(A12), 1468, doi
10.1029/2002JA009430, 2002.

WEIMER: Electric potentials and fields that are described by Weimer (1996). The electric field
calculation added by the CEDAR Database to Weimer's electric potential model were found to be in
error in February 2001, and were corrected. This model should not be shared indiscriminantly since it is
copyrighted, and users need to be in touch with the creator, Daniel Weimer (dan.weimer@att.net). A
2001 updated version of the electric potential model is available from Daniel Weimer, with electric field
calculations added in the NCAR version. The NCAR 2001 Weimer model can be obtained from NCAR
after we contact the provider. The 2005 Weimer model can be obtained from NCAR or Weimer as pre-
compiled IDL code with a special request. The references are

Weimer, D. R., A flexible, IMF dependant model of high-latitude electric potentials having "space
weather" applications, Geophysical Research Letters, 23, 2549-2552, 1996.
Weimer, D. R., An improved model of ionospheric electric potentials including substorm perturbations
and application to the Geospace Environment Modeling November 24, 1996, event, J. Geophys. Res.,
106, 407-416, 2001.
Weimer, D. R., Improved ionospheric electrodynamic models and application to calculating Joule
heating rates, J. Geophys. Res., 110, A05306, doi:10.1029/2004JA010884, 2005.

Some of these models and others are available from the National Space Science Data Center (NSSCD)
at http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/space/model. Some references about the available models and application
software are

Bilitza, D., Solar-terrestrial models and application software, National Space Science Data Center
Report, NSSDC 90-19, Greenbelt, MD, July, 1990.
Bilitza, D., Solar-terrestrial models at the National Space Science Data Center, J. Atmos. Terr. Phys. 53,
1207-1211, 1991.
Bilitza, D., Solar-terrestrial models and application software, Planet. Space Sci. 40, 541-579, 1992.

Accessing the Database


The main CEDAR home page is at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu, and everything else is linked. There
are about 23 GB of data at the High Altitude Observatory (HAO) at NCAR and is made available via the
Virtual Solar-Terrestrial Observatory (VSTO) at http://www.vsto.org. These data are available to the
entire CEDAR community if they accept the Rules of the Road. To retrieve data from the CEDAR
Database, a user must have on file a valid access form on the web at
http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/documents/access.html or in this catalog. The form can be submitted via

38
the web, e-mailed, mailed or faxed to Barbara Emery (emery@ucar.edu). Almost 800 persons have
signed the access form at one time or another, and of these, about 650 are still active and so have a web
username. About 80 web usernames are added each year.

If access and retrieval via the web is feasible, requests for data may be made using a data request form
on the web at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/documents/datareq.form.html or in this catalog.

The TIMED satellite was launched in December 2001. The TIMED data center is located at the Applied
Physics Laboratory of the John Hopkins University. Registration for data access is at
http://www.timed.jhuapl.edu/register/index.html. The CEDAR Database is a node of the data system,
and accepts data from the Ground Based Investigators (GBIs) to distribute and/or to archive. The list of
TIMED GBIs and instruments is on the web at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/timed/timed.html, and new
data are listed at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/new.html.

Accessing Documentation and Plots via the WWW or Anonymous ftp

Summary plots for the CEDAR Database are located on the web at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu under
'Data Services' and 'Browse Plots'. Data plots are accessed by clicking on the location name on the
image map. Plots of indices and model output are accessed after the image map. This site contains a link
to anonymous ftp at http://download.hao.ucar.edu/archive/cedar. where some of the documents are
located. They are also on the web under the 'Documents' folder. Documentation about the CEDAR
Database includes the Annual Catalogue (present document), the CEDAR Database Format, the 1996
CEDAR Database Committee Report, a copy of the User Guide, an inventory of the Database
contents, file notes on the data set mass store volumes that can contain caveats on the data, and a lists of
parameter codes which is also in this catalog in a shorter form. All these documents are available on
the web site http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu under 'Documents'. There is also a List of URLs to sites of
interest to the CEDAR community at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/community/urls.html. Finally, there
is a set of easy to hard examples on how to get data with an official login for the CEDAR Database at
http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/documents/dbexamples.html. All of these documents can be requested in
hard-copy form.

Obtaining Data from the CEDAR Database

There are various ways to obtain data from the CEDAR Database. A user can use the web access, make
a data request, or come in person to NCAR.

Web Access

CEDAR data can be retrieved using the World Wide Web pages at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu or at
http://www.vsto.org. To retrieve data from the CEDAR Database, users need a valid web username and
password.

The web interface provides an interactive data selection menu and allows subsets of data files to be
selected instead of whole files by choosing only selected parameters. At present there are several
formats:
39
1. TAB which is a tab delimited hierarchical ascii default output similar to the Database ascii
format;
2. FLAT which is the flat file ascii version of TAB, where 1-dimensional information is repeated
throughout the changing 2-dimensional parameters;
3. INFO are the data headers describing the data set, and should be downloaded for accurate
metadata information;
4. DAS are the descriptors of the record information, including names of parameters, units, scaling,
etc.;
5. DDS are the array descriptors for the particular CEDAR records being considered;
6. OPeNDAP is the binary data stream returning a data object which can be used by applications
such as IDL, Matlab, etc.;
7. STREAM is the NCAR binary format (.cbf for Cray blocked format) as a copy of the original
.cbf file in the Database.

Authentication (CEDARWEB user login and password) is required only at the data retrieval stage and is
not required for browsing the data as in previous versions of the interface. If a user has an OPeNDAP
enabled client, and has enabled application/octet-stream in their browser preferences, then they can
choose OPeNDAP binary. Both Graphical User Interfaces (GUI) and Application Programming
Interfaces (API) via applications like IDL (Interactive Data Language) and Matlab can use the generated
URLs if they are OPeNDAP enabled (see the Tools/Models section of the cedarweb pages for the
software).

CEDAR data can be chosen by instrument, data type, parameter or date range. Once a time interval and
a single instrument are selected, the rest of the web pages allow selection of how the data will be
returned. Data is sent back directly to the user via the http protocol. Aside from the static summary plots,
on-line plotting is available for some instruments. For more information, contact us at
cedar_db@hao.ucar.edu

Data Requests

Using the data request form large amounts of data can be requested, where CDs can be an efficient
means of transfer to the user's home institution. The most popular means of transfer for those with
internet access is ftp transfer of files up to about 2 GB which are put in public directories on anonymous
ftp. A standard packed integer binary format was adopted to facilitate data transfer which was expanded
to include a character version. All data are stored in the binary format, but many users prefer data in the
character version. Both versions are described in the CEDAR Database Format, and access routines
for some computers are available upon request.

Visiting NCAR

For extensive computer usage, scientists or students can apply for their own account on the NCAR
supercomputers through normal NCAR channels, or can set up an account for a joint project with an
NCAR scientist. Contact Barbara Emery (emery@ucar.edu) for further information. If the application is
approved, no charge is made for users with projects funded by the NSF or for joint projects with NCAR
scientists.

Scientists are welcome to visit NCAR in order to work with the Database and interact with NCAR
scientists. Desk space and a computer account can normally be provided with advance notice. There are
a limited amount of funds available for short term visits. NCAR also has visitor and fellowship
40
programs for scientists and students interested in a longer visit. Contact Arthur Richmond
(richmond@ucar.edu) for further information about these programs.

Rules of the Road


Smooth functioning of the Database requires that there be clear agreements among the parties involved
in acquiring, handling, and using the data. The scientists who submit data have invested considerable
time, effort, and expertise in collecting and processing the data for submission to the Data Base. Despite
this effort, there are still uncertainties and limitations of the data, making it important for the user to
contact the data suppliers early on in a project. The suppliers will help the user understand the
characteristics and limitations of the data, and may even be willing to collaborate in prospective studies.
It is important that these efforts receive appropriate acknowledgment by users of the data. In addition,
the Database needs to maintain records to evaluate how it is being used. The following 'Rules of the
Road' have been agreed upon to satisfy these needs and to clarify the responsibilities of users.

1. The prospective user must submit an access form to obtain access to the Database. Access forms must
be updated periodically.

2. Data obtained from the Database are to be shared only with other users who have an up-to-date access
form on file with NCAR.

3. The user is required to establish early contact with the organization(s) whose data are involved in the
project to discuss the intended usage, in the light of possible data limitations.

4. Before they are formally submitted, draft copies of all reports and publications must be sent to the
contact scientist at the data-supplying organization(s) along with an offer of co-authorship to scientists
who have provided data. This offer may be declined.

5. The Database and the organizations that contributed data must be acknowledged in all reports and
publications.

6. Copies of reports and papers are to be sent to the Database so that the Bibliography of Database
Acknowledgements can be kept up to date.

Users will be reminded periodically of their oblications to follow the Rules of the Road.

The Rules of the Road for models and indices are somewhat relaxed from the above. All models should
be referenced and if the model or outputs are taken from the CEDAR Database, the Database should be
acknowledged. Users of the AMIE, CTIM/CTIP, FLIP, GLOW and TIGCM/TIEGCM/TIMEGCM
models must offer co-authorship and generally work closely with the modellers. Most geophysical
indices do not require acknowledgement of either the CEDAR Database or any contact person.
Exceptions to this are estimates of the hemispheric power, the midnight equatorward auroral boundary,
and the Vostok Polar Cap Index, which should be treated like models. That is, references should be
given and the CEDAR Database should be acknowledged if the values are taken from the Database.

41
Bibliography of Database Acknowledgements
The following list are publications that have acknowledged the CEDAR Database in their
acknowledgements. The list may be incomplete. Any corrections are welcome.

Abraham, Saji and David M. le Vine, Use of IRI to model the effect of ionopshere on earth remote
sensing at L-band, Advances in Space Research, 34, 2059-2066, 2004.

Ahn, B.-H., A. D. Richmond, Y. Kamide, H. W. Kroehl, B. A. Emery, O. de la Beaujardière and S.-I.


Akasofu, An ionospheric conductance model based on ground magnetic disturbance data, J. Geophys.
Res.,103, 14,769-14,780, 1998.

Ahn, B.-H., B. A. Emery, H. W. Kroehl and Y. Kamide, The average characteristics of the electric field
and ionospheric conductance distributions over the auroral region, Substorms-4 proceedings, edited by
S. Kokubun and Y. Kamide, Terra Scientific Publishing Company, Tokyo, 695-698, 1998.

Ahn, B.-H., B. A. Emery, H. W. Kroehl and Y. Kamide, The climatological characteristics of the auroral
ionosphere in terms of electric field and ionospheric conductance, J. Geophys. Res., 104, 10,031-10,040,
1999.

Basu, B., J. M. Retterer, O. de La Beaujardière, C. E. Valladares, and E. Kudeki, Theoretical


relationship between maximum value of the post-sunset drift velocity and peak-to-valley ratio of
anomaly TEC, Geophys. Res. Lett., 31, L03807, doi: 10.1029/2003GL018725, 2004.

Berg, Glenn A., Polar cap auroral arcs: Observations, theories, and a numerical model, Ph. D. thesis,
Cornell University, 1993.

Berkey, J. E., A. D. Richmond, R. M. Barnes, S. Gonzalez, and C. A. Tepley, Solar cycle variations in F
region electrodynamic drifts at Arecibo, J. Geophys. Res., 95, 4303-4306, 1990.

Buonsanto, M. J. and J. C. Foster, Effects of magnetospheric electric fields and neutral winds on the
low-middle latitude ionosphere during the March 20-21, 1990 storm, J. Geophys. Res., 11, 19,133-
19,140, 1993.

Buonsanto, M. J., M. Codrescu, B. A. Emery, C. G. Fesen, T. J. Fuller-Rowell, D. J. Melendez-Alvira


and D. P. Sipler, Comparison of models and measurements at Millstone Hill during the January 24-26,
1993, minor storm interval, J. Geophys. Res., 102, 7267-7277, 1997.

Buonsanto, J. J., S. A. Gonzalez, X. Pi, J. M. Ruohoniemi, M. P. Sulzer, W. E. Swartz, J. P Thayer and


D. N. Yuan, Radar chain study of the May, 1995 storm, J. Atmos. Solar-Terr. Phys., 61, 233-248, 1999.

Cade, W. B., A correlative comparison of geomagnetic storms and auroral substorms using geomagnetic
indices, M. Sc. thesis, Utah State University, 1993.

Caton, R., J. L. Horwitz, P. G. Richards and C. Liu, Modeling of F-region ionospheric upflows observed
by EISCAT, Geophys. Res. Lett., 23, 1537-1540, 1996.

42
Christie, M. S., A comparison of optically measured and radar-derived horizontal neutral winds, M. Sc.
thesis, Utah State University, 1990.

Cliffswallow, W., Derivation of exospheric temperature at high latitudes from incoherent-scatter radar
data, M. Sc. thesis, Utah State University, 1990.

Cooper, M. L., C. R. Clauer, B. A. Emery, A. D. Richmond, and J. D. Winningham, A storm time


"AMIE" analysis to compute global electrodynamic parameters during the severe geomagnetic storm of
November 8-9, 1991, J. Geophys. Res., 100, 19,329-19,342, 1995.

Crowley, G., A. J. Ridley, D. Deist, S. Wing, D. J. Knipp, B. A. Emery, J. Foster, R. Heelis, M. Hairston
and B. W. Reinisch, Transformation of high-latitude ionospheric F region patches into blobs during the
March 21, 1990, storm, J. Geophys. Res., 105, 5215-5230, 2000.

de la Beaujardière, O., D. Alcayde, J. Fontanari, and C. Leger, Seasonal dependence of high-latitude


electric fields, J. Geophys. Res., 96, 5723-5735, 1991.

Deng, Wei, T. L. Killeen, A. G. Burns, R. M. Johnson, B. A. Emery, R. G. Roble, J. D. Winningham,


and J. B. Gary, One-dimensional hybrid satellite track model for the Dynamics Explorer 2 (DE 2)
satellite, J. Geophys. Res., 100, 1611-1624, 1995.

Emery, B. A., A. D. Richmond, H. W. Kroehl, C. D. Wells, J. M. Ruohoniemi, M. Lester, D. J. Knipp,


F. J. Rich, J. C. Foster, O. de la Beaufardière, C. Senior, L. M. Shier, J. F. McKee, and S. Maeda,
Electric potential patterns deduced for the SUNDIAL period of September 23-26, 1986, Annal.
Geophys., 8, 399-408, 1990.

Emery, B. A., G. Lu, E. P. Szuszczewicz, A. D. Richmond, R. G. Roble, P. G. Richards, K. L. Miller, R.


Niciejewski, D. S. Evans, F. J. Rich, W. F. Denig, D. L. Chenette, P. Wilkinson, S. Pulinets, K. F.
O'Loughlin, R. Hanbaba, M. Abdu, P. Jiao, K. Igarashi, and B. M. Reddy, Assimilative mapping of
ionospheric electrodynamics in the thermosphere- ionosphere general circulation model comparisons
with global ionospheric and thermospheric observations during the GEM/SUNDIAL period of March
28-29, 1992, J. Geophys. Res., 101, 26, 681-26, 696, 1996

Emery, B. A., C. Lathuillere, P. G. Richards, R. G. Roble, M. J. Buonsanto, D. J. Knipp, P. Wilkinson,


D. P. Sipler and R. Niciejewski, Time dependent thermospheric neutral response to the 2-11 November
1993 storm period, J. Atmos. Solar-Terr. Phys., 61, 329-350, 1999.

Emmert, J. T., B. G. Fejer and D. P. Sipler, Climatology and latitudinal gradients of quiet-time
thermospheric neutral winds over Millstone Hill from Fabry-Perot interferometer measurements, J.
Geophys. Res., 108 (5), 1196, doi 10.1029/2002JA009765, 2003.

Engelmann, P. A., Relating soft particle precipitation to ionospheric convection patterns using
incoherent scatter radar observations, M. Sc. thesis, Utah State University, 1997.

Fejer, B. G., F region plasma drifts over Arecibo: Solar cycle, seasonal, and magnetic activity effects, J.
Geophys. Res., 98, 13,645-13,652, 1993.

Fesen, C. G., B. A. Emery, M. J. Buonsanto, Q. H. Zhou and M. P. Sulzer, Simulations of the F region
during the January 1993 10-day campaign, J. Geophys. Res., 102, 7249-7265, 1997.
43
Fesen, C. G., and R. G. Roble, Simulations of the September 1987 lower thermospheric tides with the
National Center for Atmospheric Research Thermosphere-Ionosphere General Circulation Model, J.
Geophys. Res., 96, 1173-1180, 1991.

Fesen, C.G., R.G. Roble and E.C. Ridley, Thermospheric tides at equinox: Simulations with coupled
composition and auroral forcings, 1, Diurnal component, J. Geophys. Res., 96, 3647-3662, 1991.

Fesen, C.G., R.G. Roble and E.C. Ridley, Thermospheric tides at equinox: Simulations with coupled
composition and auroral forcings, 2, Semidiurnal component, J. Geophys. Res., 96, 3663-3678, 1991.

García-Comas, M., La Media y Alta Atmósfera: Inversión e Interpretación de las Medidas del
Instrumento SABER, Ph. D. thesis, University of Granada, Spain, 2004.

Gasda, S. and A. D. Richmond, Longitudinal and interhemispheric variations of auroral ionospheric


electrodynamics in a realistic geomagnetic field, J. Geophys. Res., 103, 4011-4021, 1998.

Gavrilov, N. M., A. D. Richmond, F. Bertin and M. Lafeuille, Investigation of seasonal and interannual
variations of internal gravity wave intensity in the thermosphere over Saint Santin, J. Geophys. Res., 99,
6297-6306, 1994.

Gille, S. T., A. Hauchecorne, and M.-L. Chanin, Semidiurnal and diurnal tidal effects in the middle
atmosphere as seen by Rayleigh Lidar, J. Geophys. Res., 96, 7579-7587, 1991.

Hall, T. M., Radar observations and dynamics of the polar summer mesosphere, Ph. D. thesis, Cornell
University, 1991.

Hall, T. M., J. Y. N. Cho, M. C. Kelley, and W. K. Hocking, A re-evaluation of the Stokes drift in the
polar summer mesosphere, J. Geophys. Res., 97, No. D1, 887-897, 1992.

Hedin, A. E., Extension of the MSIS thermosphere model into the middle and lower atmosphere, J.
Geophys. Res., 96, 1159-1172, 1991.

Hedin, A. E., M. A. Biondi, R. G. Burnside, G. Hernandez, R. M. Johnson, T. L. Killeen, C. Mazaudier,


J. W. Meriwether, J. E. Salah, R. J. Sica, R. W. Smith, N. W. Spencer, V. B. Wickwar, and T. S. Virdi,
Revised global model of thermosphere winds using satellite and ground based observations, J. Geophys.
Res., 96, 7657-7688, 1991.

Hocke, K. and K. Igarashi, Diurnal and semidiurnal tide in the upper middle atmosphere during the first
year of simultaneous MF radar observations in Northern and Southern Japan (45 N and 31 N), Ann.
Geophys., 17, 405-414, 1999.

Johnson, M. W., Electron density comparisons between radar observations and 3-D ionospheric model
calculations, M. Sc. thesis, Utah State University, 1990.

Kamide, Y., A. D. Richmond, B. A. Emery, C. F. Hutchins, B.-H. Ahn, O. de la Beaujardière, J. C.


Foster, R. A. Heelis, H. W. Kroehl, F. J. Rich, and J. A. Slavin, Ground-based studies of ionospheric
convection associated with substorm expansion, J. Geophys. Res., 99, 19,451- 19,466, 1994.

44
Knipp, D. J., The use of localized satellite observations for determining high-latitude electric fields and
currents, M. Sc. thesis, University of California, Los Angeles, 1988.

Knipp, D. J., Quantifying and reducing uncertainty in the Assimilative Mapping of Ionospheric
Electrodynamics, Ph. D. thesis, University of California, Los Angeles, 1989.

Knipp, D. J., A. D. Richmond, G. Crowley, O. de al Beaujardière, E. Friis-Christensen, D. S. Evans, J.


C. Foster, I. W. McCrea, F. J. Rich, and J. A. Waldock, Electrodynamic patterns for September 19,
1984, J. Geophys. Res., 94, 16,913-16,923, 1989.

Knipp, D. J., A. D. Richmond, B. Emery, N. U. Crooker, O. de la Beaujardière, D. Evans, and H.


Kroehl, Ionospheric convection response to changing IMF direction, Geophys. Res. Lett., 18, 721-724,
1991.

Knipp, D. J., B. A. Emery, A. D. Richmond, N. U. Crooker, M. R. Hairston, J. A. Cumnock, W. F.


Denig, F. J. Rich, O. de la Beaujardière, J. M. Ruohoniemi, A. S. Rodger, G. Crowley, B.-H. Ahn, D. S.
Evans, T. J. Fuller-Rowell, E. Friis-Christensen, M. Lockwood, H. W. Kroehl, C. G. Maclennan, A.
McEwin, R. J. Pellinen, R. J. Morris, G. B. Burns, V. Papitashvili, A. Zaitzev, O. Troshichev, N. Sato,
P. Sutcliffe, and L. Tomlinson, Ionospheric convection response to slow, strong variations in a
northward Interplanetary Magnetic Field: A case study for January 14, 1988, J. Geophys. Res., 98,
19,273-19,292, 1993.

Knipp, D. J., B. A. Emery, A. D. Richmond, and M. R. Hairston, Mapping ionospheric convection


response to IMF By negative and Bz positive conditions, J. Atmos. Terr. Phys., 56, 223-235, 1994.

Knipp, D. J., B. A. Emery, M. Engebretson, X. Li, A. H. McAllister, T. Mukai, S. Kokubun, G. D.


Reeves, D. Evans, T. Obara, X. Pi, T. Rosenberg, A. Weatherwax, M. G. McHarg, F. Chun, K. Mosely,
M. Codrescu, L. Lanzerotti, F. J. Rich, J. Sharber and P. Wilkinson, An overview of the early November
1993 geomagnetic storm, J. Geophys. Res., 103, 26,197-26,220, 1998.

Lester, M., O. de la Beaujardière, J. C. Foster, M. P. Freeman, H. Luhr, J. M. Ruohoniemi, and W.


Swider, The response of the large scale ionospheric convection pattern to changes in the IMF and
substorms: Results from the SUNDIAL 1987 campaign, Annales Geophysicae, 11, 556-571, 1993.

Lu, G., A. D. Richmond, B. A. Emery, P. H. Reiff, O. de la Beaujardière, F. J. Rich, W. F. Denig, H. W.


Kroehl, L. R. Lyons, J. M. Ruohoniemi, E. Friis-Christensen, H. Opgenoorth, M. A. L. Persson, R. P.
Lepping, A. S. Rodger, T. Hughes, A. McEwin, S. Dennis, R. Morris, G. Burns, and L. Tomlinson,
Interhemispheric asymmetry of the high-latitude ionospheric convection pattern, J. Geophys. Res., 99,
6491-6510, 1994.

Lu, G., A. D. Richmond, B. A. Emery, and R. G. Roble, Magnetosphere-ionosphere-thermosphere


coupling: Effect of neutral winds on energy transfer and field-aligned current, J. Geophys. Res., 100,
19,643-19,659, 1995.

Lu, G., B. A. Emery, A. S. Rodger, M. Lester, J. R. Taylor, D. S. Evans, J. M. Ruohoniemi, W. F.


Denig, O. de la Beaujardière, R. A. Frahm, J. D. Winningham, and D. L. Chenette, High-latitude
ionospheric electrodynamics as determined by the assimilative mapping of ionospheric electrodynamics
procedure for the conjunctive SUNDIAL/ATLAS-1/GEM period of March 28-29, 1992, J. Geophys.
Res., 101, 26,697-26,718, 1996.
45
Mueller-Wodarg, I.,Modelling perturbations through the mesopause into the Earth's upper atmosphere,
Ph. D. thesis, University College London, 1997.

Rasmussen, C. E., R. W. Schunk, and V. B. Wickwar, A photochemical equilibrium model for


ionospheric conductivity, J. Geophys. Res., 93, 9831-9840, 1988.

Richmond, A. D., Ionospheric electrodynamics using magnetic apex coordinates, J. Geomag. Geoelectr.,
47, 191-212, 1995.

Richmond, A. D., and Y. Kamide, Mapping electrodynamic features of the high-latitude ionosphere
from localized observations: Technique, J. Geophys. Res., 93, 5741-5759, 1988.

Richmond, A. D., Y. Kamide, B.-H. Ahn, S.-I. Akasofu, D. Alcayde, M. Blanc, O. de la Beaujardière,
D. S. Evans, J. C. Foster, E. Friis-Christensen, T. J. Fuller-Rowell, J. M. Holt, D. Knipp, H. W. Kroehl,
R. P. Lepping, R. J. Pellinen, C. Senior, and A. N. Zaitzev, Mapping electrodynamic features of the
high-latitude ionosphere from localized observations: Combined incoherent-scatter radar and
magnetometer measurements for January 18-19, 1984, J. Geophys. Res., 93, 5760-5776, 1988.

Richmond, A. D., Y. Kamide, S.-I. Akasofu, D. Alcayde, M. Blanc, O. de la Beaujardière, D. S. Evans,


J. C. Foster, E. Friis-Christensen, J. M. Holt, R. J. Pellinen, C. Senior, and A. N. Zaitzev, Global
measures of ionospheric electrodynamic activity inferred from combined incoherent scatter radar and
ground magnetometer observations, J. Geophys. Res., 95, 1061-1071, 1990.

Shen, C.-S., and M.-Y. Zi, A study of the coupling between high and low latitudinal ionospheres using
observations from incoherent scatter radar link, Acta Geophysica Sinica, 33, 512-520, 1990.

Shepherd, M. G., W. J. F. Evans, G. Hernandez, D. Offermann, H. Takahashi, Variability of


mesospheric temperature: Mean temperature field, J. Geophys. Res., 109, D24, D24117,
doi:10.1029/2004JD005054, 2004.

Slinker, S. P., J. A. Fedder, B. A. Emery, K. B. Baker, D. Lummerzheim, J. G. Lyon and F. J. Rich,


Comparison of global MHD simulations with AMIE simulations for the events of May 19-20, 1996, J.
Geophys. Res., 104, 28,379-28,395, 1999.

Stening, R. J., The lunar tide in sporadic E, Annales Geophysicae, 1344-1351, 1999.

Sugiyama, T., Y. Muraoka, H. Sogawa, and S. Fukao, Oscillations in polar mesospheric summer echoes
and bifurcation of noctilucent cloud formation, Geophys. Res. Lett., 23, 653-656, 1996.

Taylor, J. R., T. K. Yeoman, M. Lester, B. A. Emery and D. J. Knipp, Variations in the polar cap area
during intervals of substorm activity on 20-21 March 1990 deduced from AMIE convection patterns,
Ann. Geophys., 14, 879-887, 1996.

Taylor, J. R., M. Lester, T. K. Yeoman, B. A. Emery, D. J. Knipp, D. Orr, S. I. Solovyev, T. J. Hughes


and H. Lühr, The response of the magnetosphere to the passage of a coronal mass ejection on March 20-
21 1990, Annal. Geophys., 15, 671-684, 1997.

46
Taylor, M. J., E. H. Ryan, T. F. Tuan, and R. Edwards, Evidence of preferential directions for gravity
wave propagation due to wind filtering in the middle atmosphere, J. Geophys. Res., 98, 6047-6057,
1993.

Zhou, L., Modeling and model-data comparisons of the thermal plasma flows in the mid-latitude
ionosphere, Ph. D. thesis, Utah State University, 1997.

CEDAR Database Access Form


The CEDAR Database at NCAR contains documentation, indices, empirical models, model outputs and
data. Webnames are available to access the data using the World Wide Web. Complete inventories of
the data are at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/documents/inventory.html and on ftp at
http://download.hao.ucar.edu/archive/cedar/catmad.list. This form can be mailed to: Barbara Emery
(HAO/NCAR, P. O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307); Faxed to: (303) 497-1589; or e-mailed to:
emery@ucar.edu.

Name:

Work Address (University or Lab):

E-mail:

Telephone:

FAX:

Do you already have an existing web username to access the CEDAR Database via the World Wide
Web?
___ Yes, and I would like to keep it.
___ Yes, but I would like to release my existing web username of __________
___ No, and I would like a web username of ________________
___ No, since I am not interested or would prefer to get any data via the CEDAR Data Request Form

Do you already have a login on an NCAR computer to access the CEDAR Database via remote or local
login to the cedar computer? (We recommend NOT GETTING THIS unless there are special
circumstances since most data needs can be met with the web username.)
___ Yes, and I would like to keep it.
___ Yes, but I would like to release my existing login of ___________
___ No, and I would like a login name of ________________
___ No, since I am not interested or would prefer to get any data via the web or the CEDAR Data
Request Form

47
What data sets, models or indices have you used from the CEDAR Database?

What data sets, models or indices would you like to use? (Including those not currently available.)

If you are a student/programmer, who is your advisor/supervisor?

I agree to abide by the Rules of the Road.*


Date:
Signature:

*Users will:
1. Only share data obtained from the CEDAR Database with persons having a current access form on
file with the CEDAR Database.
2. Contact the organization(s) that contributed the data early on to discuss the intended usage and, later
to offer coauthorship on publications and reports.
3. Acknowledge the CEDAR Database and the organizations that contributed data in all reports and
publications, according to the format provided by the CEDAR Database.
4. Send copies of all reports/publications making use of the data to the CEDAR Database.

CEDAR Data Request Form


This form may be used to request documentation, indices, empirical models, model outputs, and data
from the CEDAR Database by those who have a current CEDAR Database Access Form on file. If you
do not have a current CEDAR Database Access Form on file, please fill it out and submit it now.
Inventories of the data are at http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/documents/inventory.html and on ftp at
http://download.hao.ucar.edu/archive/cedar/catmad.list. This form can be mailed to: Barbara Emery
(HAO/NCAR, P. O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307); Faxed to: (303) 497-1589; or e-mailed to:
emery@ucar.edu.

Date:
Name:
E-mail:

Which instruments, model outputs, indices, models, or software will be used?

Select type: ASCII_, binary_

Select media (CDRom, Mac or PC 3 or 5 inch floppy, ftp transfer, etc):

Instruments/Model Outputs/Indices/Models/Software/Documents Desired:

48
CEDAR Database Instrument Coverage
Number of months per year with observations or model results in the CEDAR Database.

Satellite Data [pfx 170=particle flux data], Indices [imf 120=IMF, ehp 175=estimated hemispheric
power, eqb 180=auroral boundary index, gpi 210=geophysical indices, aei 211=AE, dst 212=Dst, pcv
220=Vostok polar cap index] and Models [gcm 310=TIGCM, are 311=AMIE, sdt 320=solar sd tides,
sdl 321=lunar sd tides, gsw 322=GSWM] 1966 through 2007.

Year pfx | imf ehp eqb gpi aei dst pcv | gcm are sdt sdl gsw Year
1966 | 12 12 12 | 1966
1967 | 12 12 12 | 1967
1968 | 12 12 12 | 1968
1969 | 12 12 12 | 1969
_____________________________________________________________________________________
1970 | 12 12 12 | 1970
1971 | 12 12 12 | 1971
1972 | 12 12 12 | 1972
1973 | 12 12 12 | 1973
1974 | 12 12 12 | 1974
1975 | 12 12 12 | 1975
1
1976 | 12 12 12 | 3 1976
1977 | 12 12 12 | 1977
1978 | 12 2 12 12 12 12 | 1978
1
1979 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 3 1979
_____________________________________________________________________________________
1980 | 12 12 12 12 12 | 1980
1981 | 12 12 12 12 12 | 1981
1982 | 12 12 12 12 12 | 1982
1983 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1983
1984 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1 1984
1985 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1985
1986 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1 1986
1987 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1987
2
1988 | 12 12 12 12 6 12 12 | 1 12 1988
1989 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1989
______________________________________________________________________________________
1990 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1 1990
1991 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1 1991
1992 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 3 1992
2
1993 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 8 | 12 1993
1994 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 1 | 1994
2
1995 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 4 1995
1996 | 12 12 12 12 12 1 | 1996

49
1997 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1997
1998 7 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1998
1999 12 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 1999
_____________________________________________________________________________________
2000 12 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 2000
2001 12 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 2001
2002 12 | 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 2002
2003 12 | 12 12 12 12 12 | 2003
2004 12 | 12 12 12 12 12 | 2004
2005 12 | 12 12 12 12 12 | 2005
2006 | 12 12 12 12 12 | 2006
2007 | 4 6 6 5 6 | 2007
Year pfx | imf ehp eqb gpi aei dst pcv | gcm are sdt sdl gsw Year

1) 30 of the 31 model TIGCM outputs are generic solar min/max runs.


2) Model tidal output is independent of year.

IS Radars [jro 10=Jicamarca, aro 20=Arecibo, mui 25=MU, mlh 30-32=Millstone Hill, sts 40-43=St
Santin, kkv 45=Kharkov, ist 53=Irkutsk, cht 50=Chatanika, eis 70-74=EISCAT/KST, son
80=Sondrestrom, esr 95=ESR] 1966 through 2007.

Year jro aro mui mlh sts kkv ist cht eis son esr Year
1966 2 5 9 1966
1967 12 10 12 1967
1968 12 12 11 1968
1969 4 5 12 1969
____________________________________________________________________________
1970 3 12 1970
1971 1 12 1971
1972 10 11 1972
1973 6 1973
1974 4 12 1974
1975 9 12 1975
1976 9 10 2 1976
1977 5 12 6 1977
1978 1 9 11 1978
1979 1 10 7 1979
____________________________________________________________________________
1980 10 12 1980
1981 12 4 9 10 1981
1982 11 10 9 2 1982
1983 12 12 9 1983

50
1984 3 9 10 10 3 12 1984
1985 4 9 11 10 6 11 1985
1986 10 11 4 12 11 10 8 1986
1987 5 10 8 8 3 6 7 1987
1988 10 9 11 11 8 8 1988
1989 7 8 9 11 8 9 1989
____________________________________________________________________________
1990 4 8 10 11 7 8 1990
1991 7 8 12 11 7 4 1991
1992 7 9 12 3 9 8 1992
1993 7 8 8 7 8 1993
1994 5 11 9 7 11 12 1994
1995 4 5 7 10 7 8 1995
1996 6 2 11 12 1996
1997 3 1 6 11 8 3 1997
1998 8 3 9 9 9 9 1998
1999 6 6 7 5 3 8 7 1999
____________________________________________________________________________
2000 6 2 7 6 7 11 2000
2001 6 7 7 7 12 2001
2002 9 1 3 1 5 7 5 2002
2003 7 7 2003
2004 10 7 2004
2005 10 6 2005
2006 1 1 5 2006
2007 2 2007
Year jro aro mui mlh sts kkv ist cht eis son esr Year

HF Radars [jul 840=JULIA, hhf 820=Halley, san 825=SANAE, syf 830=Syowa, sye 831=Syowa-
East, khf 845=Kapuskasing, shf 861=Saskatoon, gbf 870=Goose Bay, fhf 900=Hankasalmi, whf
910=Stokkseyri, ehf 911=Pykkvibaer] and Ion Drift Digisondes [ssd 2890=Sondre Stromfjord, qad
2930=Qaanaaq] 1988 through 2006.

Year jul hhf san syf sye kgf khf shf gbf fhf whf ehf | ssd qad Year
1988 2 | 1988
1989 | 12 1989
____________________________________________________________________________
1990 1 2 | 1990
1991 1 3 | 1991
1992 1 3 | 1992
1993 1 2 2 4 | 12 12 1993
1994 2 2 2 | 1994
1995 1 1 4 4 4 1 4 | 1995

51
1996 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 | 1996
1997 3 3 3 3 3 3 | 1997
1998 5 5 5 5 5 5 | 1998
1999 1 1 1 1 | 1999
____________________________________________________________________________
2000 2 1 | 2000
2001 5 | 2001
2002 10 | 2002
2003 12 | 2003
2004 12 | 2004
2005 11 | 2005
2006 8 | 2006
Year jul hhf san syf sye kgf khf shf gbf fhf whf ehf | ssd qad Year

Red line 200-300 km Fabry-Perot Interferometers (FPIs) [spf 5000=South Pole, ahf 5015=Arrival
Heights, hfp 5020=Halley, mjf 5060=Mt John (also green line 93-101 km and [OH] 83-91 km), aqf
5140=Arequipa, afp 5160=Arecibo, fpf/aaf 5240/5292=Fritz Peak/Ann Arbormfp 5340=Millstone Hill,
wfp 5430=Watson Lake, cfp 5460=College, pkf 5465=Poker Flat ASI, sfp 5480=Sondre Stromfjord
(also green line 93-101 km in 2002-2003), ikf 5510=Inuvik (green line > Oct 2001), rfp 5535=Resolute
Bay, tfp 5540=Thule], and green line FPI 93-101 km [pfp 5300=Peach Mt], 1973 through 2005.

mfp mfp

Year spf ahf hfp mjf aqf afp fpf/aaf wfp cpf pkf sfp ikf rfp tfp pfp Year
1973 6 1973
1974 12 1974
1975 11 1975
1976 12 1976
1977 12 1977
1978 12 1978
1979 12 1979
__________________________________________________________________________________________
1980 7 12 1980
1981 5 12 2 1981
1982 4 10 5 1982
1983 7 4 11 3 4 1983
1984 2 2 5 3 1984
1985 3 9 1985
1986 7 4 8 1986
1987 5 7 3 1987
1988 5 7 6 8 2 1988
1989 6 5 9 1 11 8 3 1989
__________________________________________________________________________________________

52
1990 2 5 9 5 10 8 1990
1991 6 3 11 4 12 2 10 1991
1992 6 6 11 5 12 4 5 1992
1993 6 7 12 1 12 6 8 1993
1994 6 7 12 2 12 4 3 1994
1995 6 6 11 1995
1996 5 2 7 7 3 7 1996
1997 6 5 8 6 12 1997
1998 6 4 8 9 6 1998
1999 6 8 4 9 1999
__________________________________________________________________________________________
2000 12 4 2000
2001 12 6 2001
2002 7 11 4 1 9 2002
2003 7 5 8 2 2003
2004 7 4 9 7 2004
2005 7 4 4 2005
Year spf ahf hfp mjf aqf afp fpf/aaf wfp cpf pkf sfp ikf rfp tfp pfp Year

[OH] 83-91 km Michelson Interferometers (MIs) [spm 5700=South Pole, dbm 5720=Daytona Beach,
stm 5860=Stockholm, sfm 5900=Sondre Stromfjord, rbm 5950=Resolute Bay, eum 5980=Eureka] and
[OH] 83-91 km Spectrometer [wup 3320=Wuppertal], 1980 through 2006.

Year spm dbm stm sfm rbm eum | dvs wup Year
1980 | 4 1980
1981 | 8 1981
1982 | 12 1982
1983 | 10 1983
1984 | 4 1984
1985 | 1985
1986 | 1986
1987 | 8 1987
1988 | 12 1988
1989 | 12 1989
____________________________________________________________________________
1990 | 8 11 1990
1991 | 12 1991
1992 1 | 12 1992
1993 8 | 12 1993
1994 12 2 | 4 12 1994
1995 4 | 9 12 1995
1996 4 3 | 8 12 1996
1997 4 4 | 8 12 1997

53
1998 5 4 | 9 12 1998
1999 4 3 | 9 12 1999
____________________________________________________________________________
2000 2 | 9 12 2000
2001 7 1 | 9 12 2001
2002 6 4 | 9 12 2002
2003 6 | 9 12 2003
2004 | 12 2004
2005 | 12 2005
2006 | 12 2006
Year spm dbm stm sfm rbm eum | dvs wup Year

Lidars [uil 6300=University of Illinois, csl 6320=Colorado State University, usl 6330=Utah State
University], Imagers [mtm 7191=[OH] 87+/-2 km MTM at Ft Collins and Maui; off-site usi
7190=Utah State University, mhi 7200,7240=Millstone Hill, sfi 7480=Sondre Stromfjord], off-site All-
Sky Cameras [qac 7580=Qaanaaq, lnc 7591,7600=Longyearbyen,Ny Alesund, noc 7610=Nord], and
MST Radars [arm 1040=Arecibo, pkr 1140=Poker Flat] 1979 through 2005.

Year uil csl3 usl | mtm usi mhi sfi | qac lnc noc | arm pkr Year
1979 | | | 11 1979
____________________________________________________________________________
1980 | | | 12 1980
1981 | | | 11 1981
1982 | | | 12 1982
4
1983 | | 2 2 | 12 1983
1984 | | 4 34 | 12 1984
1985 | | 6 3 | 6 1985
1986 | | 6 4 | 1986
1987 | 6 | 5 4 | 1987
1988 | 7 | 4 3 | 1988
1989 4 | 10 | 5 1 2 | 3 1989
____________________________________________________________________________
1990 2 2 | 6 | 6 2 5 | 1990
1991 9 11 | 12 | 3 1 2 | 1991
1992 7 12 | 12 | | 1992
1993 12 | 1 12 | | 1993
1994 12 | 9 | | 1994
1995 12 | | | 1995
1996 9 12 | | | 1996
1997 8 12 | 7 | | 1997
1998 3 12 1 | 5 | | 1998
1999 3 | 2 | | 1999
____________________________________________________________________________

54
2000 | 8 | | 2000
2001 | 7 | | 2001
2002 12 | 6 8 | | 2002
2003 12 | 12 8 | | 2003
2004 11 | 2 2 | | 2004
2005 9 | 2 2 | | 2005
Year uil csl3 usl | mtm usi mhi sfi | qac lnc noc | arm pkr Year

3)1995 is a nightly climatology of lidar temperature and sodium density at Ft Collins based on 417
nights between March 1990 and March 1999. There are also nightly average temperature values at 87
km from 1990-1999, and hourly data for 1993 and 2002 and beyond.
4) The all-sky camera at Ny Alesund was at Longyearbyen 1983-4.

MF/LF Radars [sbf 1210=Scott Base, dav 1215=Davis, maf 1220=Mawson, ccf 1230=Christchurch,
adf 1240=Adelaide, tir 1254=Tirunelveli, yam 1275=Yamagawa, wak 1310=Wakkanai, cof
1320=Collm LF, saf 1340=Saskatoon, rpk Poker Flat, trf 1390=Tromsø], and Meteor Wind Radars
[atm 1560=Atlanta, dum1620=Durham, cia 2090=Christmas Island MEDAC, pla 2200=Platteville
MEDAC] 1974 through 2007.

Year sbf dav maf ccf adf tir yam wak cof saf rpk trf | atm dum cia pla Year
1974 | 5 1974
1975 | 11 1975
1976 | 10 1976
1977 | 11 1977
5
1978 | 7 12 1978
5
1979 | 1 12 1979
__________________________________________________________________________________________
______
1980 | 6 125 1980
5
1981 | 12 12 1981
1982 | 12 125 1982
1983 | 9 1983
1984 7 | 9 1984
1985 12 | 8 1985
1986 12 | 11 1986
1987 12 2 2 1 2 2 | 4 1 1987
1988 1 12 2 1 2 2 | 1 4 1 1988
1989 2 12 2 2 2 2 | 8 1989
__________________________________________________________________________________________
1990 1 11 3 1 2 1 | 1 1990
1991 | 12 1991
1992 | 1992
1993 12 | 1993

55
1994 12 | 1994
1995 12 | 1995
1996 12 | 1996
1997 1 12 | 1997
1998 4 12 12 3 | 1998
1999 12 12 12 12 | 1999
__________________________________________________________________________________________
2000 12 10 12 12 | 2000
2001 1 12 12 12 12 | 2001
2002 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 | 2002
2003 12 12 1 1 12 12 | 2003
2004 6 12 5 | 2004
2005 12 | 2005
2006 12 | 2006
2007 5 | 2007
Year sbf dav maf ccf adf tir yam wak cof saf rpk trf | atm dum cia pla Year

5) Durham has 5 year (1978-1982) average for each month listed in 1980.

TIMED/CEDAR MLT Radars [adf 1240=Adelaide MF, asc 1539=Ascension Island meteor, dav
1215=Davis MF, emr 1775=Esrange meteor, kau 1270=Kauai MF, obn 1750=Obninsk, plr
1285=Platteville MF, rpk 1375=Poker Flat MF, rtg 1245=Rarotonga MF, rth 1221=Rothera MF, saf
1340=Saskatoon MF, trf 1390=Tromsø MF, wak 1310 Wakkanai MF, yam 1275 Yamagawa MF] 2001
through 2005.

Year adf asc dav emr kau obn plr rpk rtg rth saf trf wak yam Year
1990 4 1990
1991 12 1991
1992 12 1992
1993 11 1993
1994 12 1994
1995 11 1995
1996 12 1996
1997 12 1997
1998 12 1998
1999 12 1999
__________________________________________________________________________________________
2000 12 2000
2001 12 11 12 12 2001
2002 12 12 12 12 12 6 3 12 12 11 12 12 12 12 2002
2003 12 7 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 7 7 2003
2004 12 12 12 12 7 12 12 12 12 2 2004

56
2005 12 6 10 9 3 2005
Year adf asc dav emr kau obn plr rpk rtg rth saf trf wak yam Year

TIMED/CEDAR 4 Channel Photometers [p4p 4470=Poker Flat, y4p 4473=Fort Yukon] 2001
through 2002.

Year p4p y4p Year


2001 5 1 2001
2002 4 4 2002
Year p4p y4p Year

Colorado State University Lidar Listing


The Sodium Lidar at the Colorado State University (CSU) has been measuring sodium densities and
neutral temperatures in the 70 to 119 km region above Fort Collins (40.59N, 105.14W) since 1990. At
least 4 hours of measurements are available for each night listed below. From 1990 to 1999, average
nightly temperatures at 87 km are in the Database. Nights where there were Mesospheric Temperature
Mapper [OH] temperature measurements ~87 km during 1997-1998 are starred. The 1993 nights are in
the CEDAR Database as hourly, nightly and monthly averages every 0.5 km. Starting in 2001, the lidar
was upgraded to use 3 frequencies so that the neutral velocity could be found along the line-of-sight, or
estimated in the horizontal. Daytime observations started on a regular basis in April 2002. Since January
2002, all the nights and days per month have been sent to the CEDAR Database. Previous periods are
available from Chiao-Yao (Joe) She (joeshe@lamar.colostate.edu) or David A. Krueger
(krueger@lamar.colostate.edu).

1990 61 69 75 106

1991 56 57 77 78 80 150 160 179 185 191 193 194 198 200 233 242 243 252
cont. 257 259 264 268 280 284 285 295 312 316 318 336 338 348 351 359

1992 25 26 44 46 50 57 59 73 74 83 86 90 95 96 99 100 115 116


cont. 127 155 163 165 170 189 196 197 201 228 231 233 240 241 252 254 255 267
cont. 268 275 291 294 295 331 332 333 335 342 344 355 357 359

1993 5 13 15 22 24 32 37 44 45 53 58 64 78 79 82 83 108 110


cont. 119 122 130 131 162 163 165 191 197 204 206 208 219 224 228 243 252 254
cont. 276 279 284 297 298 312 314 320 321 338 345 348 349 363

1994 11 14 23 33 34 37 46 62 63 72 77 80 93 106 112 137 142 143


cont. 181 187 189 193 203 204 208 211 217 219 224 230 233 235 259 260 261 265
cont. 268 284 293 295 296 298 299 311 319 322 325 327 328 330 336 346 349 350
cont. 352 354
57
1995 8 21 24 34 35 36 50 52 54 67 74 79 82 105 121 152 157 164
cont. 170 188 190 194 205 206 207 213 214 220 221 222 257 268 269 271 284 285
cont. 287 288 289 290 315 319 320 329 354 361 362

1996 13 22 24 35 42 43 44 63 67 76 87 93 97 106 107 135 139 158


cont. 160 169 178 184 185 193 197 204 206 218 219 224 225 245 248 265 279 280
cont. 281 283 285 313 316 333 334 347 348 355

1997 19 20 22 25 35 39 40 41 47 56 61 66 67 69 70 72 78 86
cont. 89 90 97 103 104 107 114 125 130 133 136 140 174 180* 181* 182* 188* 190*
cont. 197* 207* 220* 227* 235* 236* 290 299* 302* 307* 320 321 325* 327* 334* 348 358* 364*
cont. 365*

1998 9 21 22 24 44 51 52 53 60* 71 72 73 85* 112 113* 114* 119* 123


cont. 136 147* 148* 149* 153* 175 176 177 178 181 198 199 200 226 230 233 234 235
cont. 240 241 246 247 260 261 271 280 282 283 292 315 321 322 324 335 336 337
cont. 348 350 351

1999 18 23 24 27 29 30 35 41 51 52 55 58 77 78 79 81 84 88
cont. 89 127 128 138 149 156 158 159 160 177 178 190 192 207 225 226 228 232
cont. 236 249 250 252 256 296 297 298 299 303 318 319 320 321 323 325 349 352
cont. 360 363

2000 12 23 46 47 50 51 59 64 65 73 74 79 132 134 151 153 161 167


cont. 173 176 177 184 186 187 194 196 218 219 233 234 237 248 249 251 257 258
cont. 259 285 295 300 301 304 342 352 354 356 357

2001 3 4 5 6 7 8 51 53 62 68 73 78 82 93 99 103 105 108


cont. 114 140 143 144 145 163 166 167 168 169 179 197 198 200 204 210 211 213
cont. 215 216 220 224 225 229 230 231 236 264 265 266 267 268 269 281 284 292
cont. 293 294 299 300 301 305 307 308 309 310 314 315 319 361 362

2002 8 9 11 12 13 14 22 27 32 34 35 37 38 46 58 76 79 83
cont. 87 88 89 90 98 102 103 108 112 113 114 115 119 120 123 125 126 127
cont. 142 143 145 146 150 151 152 153 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 198 199 205
cont. 210 211 212 221 222 223 224 245 246 247 248 257 258 259 260 280 281 282
cont. 283 285 308 310 311 320 321 323 347 348 349 350 353 354 361

2003 3 19 20 21 29 30 38 39 42 50 51 52 64 65 66 67 68 72
cont. 73 85 99 100 101 103 104 106 107 132 133 134 136 137 141 149 159 160
cont. 172 173 174 177 178 179 183 184 186 187 189 190 191 192 196 203 225 226
cont. 227 228 229 232 233 261 262 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 274 278

58
cont. 282 283 290 291 292 317 318 319 320 322 323 350 351 352 353 354 357 358

2004 38 44 45 46 47 48 56 57 68 69 70 77 78 79 86 90 91 92
cont. 105 117 118 119 124 125 126 127 132 152 153 158 160 175 189 193 194 200
cont. 201 208 225 226 227 228 229 243 246 251 259 260 261 262 282 283 284 285
cont. 300 310 311 312 313 321 336 337 338 339 340

2005 8 20 21 22 23 24 25 129 133 135 137 138 140 141 142 143 147 148
cont. 156 157 158 159 169 170 192 193 194 195 230 238 239 240 241 242 243 244
cont. 245 246 247 262 273 274 275 297 298 299 300 323 324 325 326 363 364

Mesospheric Temperature Mapper Listing


The Utah State University (USU) CEDAR Mesospheric Temperature Mapper (MTM) is a mobile CCD
imager that has been operated in several locations since its construction was completed in 1996. In
March of 1996 it was tested at Bear Lake Observatory (BLO) (41.933N, 111.417W, 49.9magN, 1981 m)
and took data at BLO between 7-18 Oct 1996, 4-15 May 1997, and 4 Aug - 24 Sep, 1998. For a year
between 11 June 1997 and 2 June 1998, the MTM took data at Fort Collins, Colorado (40.590N,
105.140W, 49.7 magN, 1570 m). It was moved to the Starfire Optical Range (SOR) near Albuquerque,
New Mexico (34.9639N, 106.4619W), and took data from October 1998 to Dec 1999. The MTM was
then upgraded at USU to include an [O2] filter for temperatures ~96 km before being deployed in Maui.
Nightly average [OH] rotational temperatures ~87 km deduced from at least 4 hours of good observing
time while the MTM was in Fort Collins, Colorado are in the CEDAR Database and are starred in the
list. Nightly [OH] and [O2] temperatures are available during the TIMED-CEDAR period in 2002-2004
from Maui, Hawaii. These nights are listed in the Combined Daily Listing for Optical Instruments.
Periods with no or poor data (moon, clouds, fog, instrument problems, etc) are not included in this list.
Higher time resolution and other nights are available from Michael Taylor (mtaylor@cc.usu.edu). See
the CSU Lidar Listing for overlap dates of MTM with the lidar in 1997 and 1998.

Bear Lake Observatory (41.933N, 111.417W, 1981 m)

____________________________________________________________________________
1996 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292
____________________________________________________________________________
1997 124 125 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135
____________________________________________________________________________
1998 226 227 230 231 232 233 234 235 237 239 240 241 244 245 246
cont. 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 262 265 266 267
____________________________________________________________________________

Fort Collins (40.590N, 105.140W, 1570 m)

____________________________________________________________________________

59
1997 162 163 176 177 178 179 180 181* 182* 183* 184 185 186* 187* 188*
cont. 189 190* 191 192 193* 194 195 196 197 198 206 207 212 213* 214*
cont. 215* 219 220* 221 223 224 226 227 228 235* 236* 237 239 240 241
cont. 256 257 268* 269 270* 271* 272* 273* 274* 275* 277* 278 279* 280* 282*
cont. 283 295 296 299 300* 301 302 303 304* 305* 306* 307* 308 309* 310*
cont. 311* 312 323 325 326 327* 328* 330* 331* 333* 334* 335 338* 339* 340
cont. 342 345 346 350 351 358* 360 361* 362 363* 364* 365*
____________________________________________________________________________
1998 1 2 3 5* 6 7* 8 15 58* 59 60* 61 62 83 84
cont. 85* 87 89 90 91* 93 94 97 113* 114 117* 119* 120* 121* 122
cont. 137* 139* 140* 144 145 146* 147* 148* 149* 150 152 153
____________________________________________________________________________

Sondrestrom All-Sky Imager Listing


All-sky imager (ASI) observations from Sondrestrom are available on the web at
http://isr.sri.com/instruments/allsky. The imager operates whenever the solar zenith angle is greater than
105 degrees and the moon is down, regardless of the weather. A complete listing for operational UT
hours and sky conditions, as observed in 630.0 nm emission, is summarized in on-line catalogs for each
winter since 1999/2000. The URL listed above also archives JPEG renderings of all available raw
images, as well as summary MPEG movie loops.

Prior to mid-November 2001, the five position filter wheel was configured to acquire images at (a) 427.8
nm (N2+), (b) 486.2 nm (H-beta protons), (c) 489.5 nm (H-beta background), (d) 630.0 nm (OI), and (e)
732/3 (OII). Most archived patrol data for a given night correspond to 427.8 nm and 630.0 nm images.
Subsequent to this date, the H-beta filter was replaced by a wideband red-glass filter to record prompt
emission longward of 645 nm and after mid-January 2002, the H-beta background filter was replaced by
a 777.4 nm (OI) filter.

The typical patrol operation integrates at 630.0 nm for 15 s, to enhance visibility of polar cap patches
and arcs, followed by a 15 to 30 s 427.8 nm integration. This summary list provides UT daynumbers
which span the on-line archive of available 630.0 nm images. For further Sondrestrom ASI details,
photometric processing, and image interpretation contact Rick Doe (doe@sri.com).

_______________________________________________________________________________________
1999-2000 257-261 269-270 341-354 360-015 017-018 026-029 031-044 053-054 059-072
cont. 084-084 097-097
_______________________________________________________________________________________
2000-2001 270-286 291-315 319-327 331-344 348-348 003-007 011-035 040-049 070-077
cont. 080-089
_______________________________________________________________________________________
2001-2002 256-271 281-302 311-331 339-358 001-025 031-053 059-087 090-099
_______________________________________________________________________________________
60
2002-2003 247-263 272-285 287-290 292-293 300-322 328-351 356-010 014-015 020-042
cont. 049-070 079-096
_______________________________________________________________________________________
2003-2004 252-252 264-282 290-297 300-311 318-340 346-001 003-004 010-029 031-032
cont. 039-048
_______________________________________________________________________________________
2004-2005 254-260 262-271 280-300 308-317 320-329 336-358 364-020 027-033
_______________________________________________________________________________________
2005-2006 326-343 352-358 016-016 028-030 032-032 034-034 036-036 044-048
_______________________________________________________________________________________

AFRL All-Sky Camera Listing


All-sky camera observations are available in the form of 35 mm black and white Kodak film at the Air
Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) for three high latitude sites. Observations were in the winter when
the sun was 15 degrees or more below the horizon and the moon was absent. The filters used were 427.8
nm and 630.0 nm, while the 557.7 nm filter was also used at Ny Alesund. Auroral displays are indicated
by an asterisk. For further details and copies of the data, contact Katsura Fukui (fukui@plh.af.mil).

For Qaanaaq, correlative data in the CEDAR Database are the Fabry-Perot at Thule (indicated by an 'F'
to the right of the dates), and Digisonde ion drifts (indicated by a 'D'). The camera at Ny Alesund was at
Longyearbyen from November 1983 through February 1984.
Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord
86 Dec 01 * 86 Dec 01-10
83 Nov 03 * 83 Nov 27-30 86 Dec 04 86 Dec 26
* 83 Nov 04-05 * 86 Dec 05-10 * 86 Dec 27-29
83 Nov 06 86 Dec 11
* 83 Nov 07 * 86 Dec 12
83 Nov 10-11 86 Dec 13
83 Nov 16-26 * 86 Dec 14
83 Nov 28 86 Dec 19-20
* 83 Nov 29-30 * 86 Dec 21
86 Dec 22
83 Dec 01-02 * 83 Dec 01-15 86 Dec 24
* 83 Dec 03-05 * 83 Dec 24-31 * 86 Dec 25-27
83 Dec 06
* 83 Dec 07 87 Jan 23 * 87 Jan 21-31
83 Dec 08 * 87 Jan 24-25
* 83 Dec 09 * 87 Jan 30
83 Dec 15-19 87 Jan 31
83 Dec 22-28
* 83 Dec 30 * 87 Feb 01-06 * 87 Feb 01-02
83 Dec 31 87 Feb 07 * 87 Feb 19
87 Feb 15-16 87 Feb 20
* 84 Jan 02 * 84 Jan 01-09 87 Feb 18 * 87 Feb 21-24
84 Jan 03 * 84 Jan 12 * 87 Feb 19-20 87 Feb 25
* 84 Jan 04-05 * 84 Jan 26-27 87 Feb 22-24 * 87 Feb 26-27
84 Jan 06 84 Jan 28-29 * 87 Feb 25-26
* 84 Jan 07
84 Jan 08
* 84 Jan 09-10 Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord
84 Jan 11-12
* 84 Jan 13 * 87 Oct 04-05 F
84 Jan 14-15 87 Oct 06 F
84 Jan 19 87 Oct 16-21 F
* 84 Jan 20 * 87 Oct 23-25 F
84 Jan 21-23 87 Oct 26 F
* 84 Jan 24-25 * 87 Oct 28-29 F
84 Jan 26 87 Oct 30 F
* 84 Jan 27-28 * 87 Oct 31 F
84 Jan 30-31
* 87 Nov 01 F * 87 Nov 22-23
84 Feb 03-09 * 84 Feb 02-04 87 Nov 02 F
84 Feb 18 84 Feb 05 * 87 Nov 17-22 F
* 84 Feb 19-20 * 84 Feb 22 87 Nov 23-25 F
84 Feb 21-24 84 Feb 26 * 87 Nov 27-30
* 84 Feb 25-26 * 84 Feb 27-28
84 Feb 27 87 Dec 10-13 * 87 Dec 11-19
* 84 Feb 28-29 * 87 Dec 14-15 87 Dec 20

61
87 Dec 17-19
* 84 Mar 01 * 87 Dec 20-29
84 Mar 02-07 87 Dec 30-31

Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord 88 Jan 08 * 88 Jan 08


* 88 Jan 09-14 * 88 Jan 11-12
84 Dec 18 * 84 Dec 27 88 Jan 15-16 88 Jan 13-21
* 84 Dec 19-20 84 Dec 29 * 88 Jan 18-19 * 88 Jan 22
84 Dec 21 * 84 Dec 31 88 Jan 20-22 88 Jan 23
* 84 Dec 22-30 * 88 Jan 23-24 * 88 Jan 24-25

85 Jan 12 * 85 Jan 01-02 88 Feb 06-11 * 88 Feb 07-09


* 85 Jan 13-15 85 Jan 09 * 88 Feb 11-13
85 Jan 16-17 * 85 Jan 10
* 85 Jan 18-20 85 Jan 11 Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord
85 Jan 21 * 85 Jan 12-29
* 85 Jan 22-23 88 Nov 18
85 Jan 24 * 88 Nov 19
* 85 Jan 25-26
85 Jan 27-28 * 88 Dec 03-06 F * 88 Dec 13-16
* 85 Jan 29 88 Dec 07 F
* 88 Dec 08-20 F
85 Feb 01 * 85 Feb 08 * 88 Dec 27-31 F
85 Feb 07 85 Feb 09
* 85 Feb 08-09 * 85 Feb 11-14 * 89 Jan 01-03 FD * 89 Jan 12-13
85 Feb 10 85 Feb 15 89 Jan 04 FD
* 85 Feb 11-14 * 89 Jan 06-07 FD
85 Feb 15 * 89 Jan 09-13 FD
* 85 Feb 16-19 * 89 Jan 25-28 FD
85 Feb 20
* 85 Feb 21 * 89 Feb 06-08 FD
85 Feb 22 89 Feb 09-10 FD
85 Feb 26-28 89 Feb 21-25 FD

85 Mar 09 Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord


Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord
* 89 Oct 29-31 D
85 Oct 09-11
* 85 Oct 12 * 89 Nov 01-03 D 89 Nov 02-03
85 Oct 13-14 89 Nov 04 D * 89 Nov 04-09
* 85 Oct 15-17 * 89 Nov 08-09 D
85 Oct 18
* 85 Oct 19-21 * 89 Dec 18-20 D * 89 Dec 20-25
85 Oct 22 89 Dec 21 D 89 Dec 26
* 85 Oct 23-24 * 89 Dec 23-26 D * 89 Dec 27
85 Oct 25 89 Dec 27 D 89 Dec 28-29
85 OCt 28-29 * 89 Dec 28-30 D * 89 Dec 30-31
89 Dec 31 D
85 Nov 02
85 Nov 04 90 Jan 12-13 * 90 Jan 19-20 90 Jan 01
85 Nov 07-09 * 90 Jan 14-15 90 Jan 21-23 90 Jan 16-17
* 85 Nov 10-11 90 Jan 16-17 * 90 Jan 24-28 * 90 Jan 18-21
85 Nov 12 * 90 Jan 18-19 90 Jan 29 90 Jan 22-23
* 85 Nov 13-17 90 Jan 20-22
85 Nov 18 * 90 Jan 23
* 85 Nov 19 90 Jan 24
85 Nov 20-22 * 90 Jan 25
85 Nov 27-28 90 Jan 26
* 90 Jan 27-31
85 Dec 02-05 * 85 Dec 02-12
* 85 Dec 06-07 * 85 Dec 14-18 * 90 Feb 01-02 * 90 Feb 13-17
85 Dec 08 * 90 Feb 12-14 90 Feb 18
* 85 Dec 09-14 90 Feb 22 * 90 Feb 19
* 85 Dec 16-20 * 90 Feb 23-26 90 Feb 20
85 Dec 21-27 90 Feb 23-24

* 86 Jan 01-03 * 86 Jan 03-04 90 Mar 17


86 Jan 05-09 86 Jan 05-06 90 Mar 21-23
* 86 Jan 10-14 * 86 Jan 07-10
86 Jan 15 * 86 Jan 12 Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord
* 86 Jan 16-20 * 86 Jan 14-17
86 Jan 21-22 86 Jan 18 90 Oct 16 90 Oct 16-18
86 Jan 29 * 86 Jan 30-31 * 90 Oct 17-18 * 90 Oct 19-20
* 86 Jan 30 90 Oct 19 90 Oct 21
86 Jan 31 * 90 Oct 20-23 * 90 Oct 22-25
90 Oct 24-26 90 Oct 26
86 Feb 01-02 86 Feb 01 * 90 Oct 27-30 * 90 Oct 27-30
* 86 Feb 03-05 * 86 Feb 06 90 Oct 31
86 Feb 06 86 Feb 07-12
* 86 Feb 07 * 90 Nov 10-17 * 90 Nov 13-14
86 Feb 08-13 90 Nov 18-21 * 90 Nov 17-26
* 86 Feb 14-17 * 90 Nov 22-24
86 Feb 27
* 86 Feb 28 * 90 Dec 10-16 * 90 Dec 11-13 * 90 Dec 10-13
90 Dec 17 * 90 Dec 15-22 90 Dec 14-15
86 Mar 01 * 90 Dec 18-23 90 Dec 23 * 90 Dec 16
* 86 Mar 02 * 90 Dec 25 90 Dec 17
86 Mar 03-08 90 Dec 27
* 86 Mar 09
86 Mar 10-11 * 91 Jan 03-23 * 91 Jan 08-13 * 91 Jan 12-15
* 86 Mar 12 91 Jan 24-25 * 91 Jan 16 91 Jan 16-17
86 Mar 13-14 91 Jan 17 * 91 Jan 18-19
* 86 Mar 15-16
* 91 Feb 03-09 * 91 Feb 02
91 Feb 10
86 Mar 17 * 91 Feb 11-16

* 91 Mar 05-07
91 Mar 08
* 91 Mar 11

62
Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord Qaanaaq Ny Alesund Nord

86 Oct 07 91 Mar 12
* 86 Oct 08-09 * 91 Mar 13-17
86 Oct 10
* 86 Oct 11-14
86 Oct 15 91 Mar 18-19
* 86 Oct 16
86 Oct 17
* 86 Oct 18

* 86 Nov 02-09 * 86 Nov 11


86 Nov 11 86 Nov 12
* 86 Nov 12-14 * 86 Nov 27-30
* 86 Nov 22
86 Nov 23
* 86 Nov 24-25
86 Nov 26-27
* 86 Nov 28
86 Nov 29-30

Operational Listing for MLT Radars


MLT (Mesosphere/Lower Thermosphere) radars measure the neutral wind velocity between about 80 and 100
km. The following listing summarizes the CEDAR Database holdings, including the TIMED/CEDAR harmonic
analyses provided by Scott Palo of the University of Colorado (palo@colorado.edu). The dates of operation are
listed from older to newer data sets for MLTRs with significant holdings in the CEDAR Database. There are
also many more radars that participated in the special LTCS periods listed below.

LTCS Campaigns
Lower Thermosphere Coupling Study (LTCS) campaigns have been scheduled since 1987 in conjuction with
the Incoherent Scatter Radar (ISR) community. The ISRs use modes that provide good E region (neutral) winds,
and the MLTR community joins them in the global analysis. The MLTR results are in the CEDAR Database for
the first 4 campaigns, while the ISR results encompass all the LTCS and later MLTCS campaigns.

LTCS-1: September 21-25, 1987 (Mawson, Christchurch, Adelaide, Durham, Collm, Saskatoon, Tromsø)

LTCS-2: December 5-10, 1988 (Scott Base, Adelaide, Christmas Island, Plateville, Durham, Collm, Saskatoon,
Tromsø)

LTCS-3: May 30 - June 4, 1989 (Scott Base, Mawson, Adelaide, Christmas Island, Collm, Saskatoon Tromsø)

LTCS-4: February 12-16, 1990 (Scott Base, Durham, Collm, Saskatoon, Tromsø)

MST Radars
Poker Flat MST radar (hourly): Feb 1979 - Aug 1981, Oct 1981 - Jun 1985.

Arecibo MST radar for AIDA'89 (1 min): March 7-15, March 28-April 11, and May 1-9, 1989.

63
MLT Radars
Adelaide, Australia MF radar (hourly winds every 2 km from 60-98 km): 2002

Atlanta, GA, USA meteor radar (3-30 day harmonic analyses and hourly winds):
Aug 1974 to Aug 1978 (missing 5 months Apr 1975, May 1976, Jul 1976, May 1977, May 1978)
Sep 1979 (missing Sep 1978 - Aug 1979 and Oct 1979 - Jun 1980)
Jul 1980 to Apr 1987 (missing 11 months Sep-Nov 1983, May 1984, Nov 1984 - Jan 1985, Apr-May 1985, Aug
1985, Jul 1986)

Christmas Island meteor radar (monthly harmonic analyses): Sep 1988 - Aug 1989; Jan-Dec 1991.
(NOTE: These data will be re-analyzed.)

Collm, Germany LF radar (monthly harmonic analyses): Jan 1993 to May 2007

Davis, Antarctica MF radar (hourly winds every 2 km from 60-98 km): 2002

Durham, NH, USA meteor radar: climatological monthly average harmonic analyses from Jan 1978 to Dec
1982, listed as year 1980, where 5 years of Januaries are averaged and listed as January 1980, etc.

Mawson, Antarctica MF radar (12 day mean winds): Jun 1984 - Nov 1990

Tirunelveli, India MF radar (hourly winds): 31 Dec 2001 to 31 Dec 2002 (missing days: 22 Feb - 5 Mar, 13-
31 Mar, 7-10 Apr, 30 Apr, 22-27 Jun, 20-22 Aug, 30 Aug, 13-16 Sep, 18 Sep - 9 Oct, 16-22 Nov)

TIMED/CEDAR MLT Radars


Scott Palo provides a sliding 4-day harmonic analysis of the TIMED/CEDAR MLTRs, beginning Jan 1, 2002
for most radars, or Jan 1, 2001 for some radars. The horizontal wind components are given for all radars. The
original data must usually be obtained from the individual data suppliers. The CEDAR DB holds the original
2002 data for the Adelaide and Davis MF radars.

Adelaide, Australia MF radar:


2002 (gaps on days 43-49, 82-86, 99-105, 108, 136-140, 184-188, 192-195, 207-209, 215-234, 253-272, 313-
316, 326-331, 349-356)
2003 (gaps on days 15-20, 67-69, 288-302, 331-335, 348-354)
2004 (gaps on days 85-91, 156-158, 262-265, 301-314)

Ascension Island meteor radar:


2002 (gaps on days 1-8, 33-35, 41-43, 48-49, 131-137, 149-154, 167-174, 184-195, 201-206, 219-231, 246-289,
291-294, 309-322, 326-333, 342-348, 351-354; end day 354)
2003 (gaps on days 1-12, 46-51, 66-71, 128-136, 190-193; end day 193)

64
Davis, Antarctica MF radar:
2002 (gaps on days 1-3, 9-12, 75-77, 109-112, 312-314)
2003 (gaps on days 118-119; end day 119)

Esrange, Sweden meteor radar:


2002 (gaps on days 21-23, 25-33, 38-46, 59, 196-222)
2003 (gaps on days 130-132, 173-176, 226-334)
2004 (gaps on days 1-31, 189-193, 198-222, 270-335, 364-366)

Kauai, HI, USA MF radar:


1990 (gaps on days 1-270, 297-304)
1991 (gaps on days 47-49, 301-304, 314-323)
1992 (gaps on days 143-152, 230-266, 330-335)
1993 (gaps on days 46-48, 84-98, 205-254, 345-356)
1994 (gaps on days 7-54, 225-229)
1995 (gaps on days 150-164)
1996 (gaps on days 25-29, 34-57, 132-148, 165-167, 211-246)
1997 (gaps on days 179-208, 336-338)
1998 (gaps on days 18-20, 32-36, 195-203, 336-341)
1999 (gaps on days 138-144, 236-255, 262-265, 290-304, 318-324, 347-365)
2000 (gaps on days 1-7, 45-48, 236-241)
2001 (gaps on days 16-17, 271-273, 345-347; end day 347)
2002 (gaps on days 1-2, 59-62, 223-225)
2003 (gaps on days 22-26, 59-61, 112-114)
2004 (gaps on days 20-25, 44-47, 56-61, 115-119, 130-134, 162-166, 242-273, 350-356)

Obninsk, Russia meteor radar (single height):


2002 (with intermittent missing days between 45-125; end day 161)

Platteville, CO, USA MF radar:


2002 (gaps on days 58-72; end day 87)

Poker Flat, AK, USA MF radar:


2001 (gaps on days 13-25, 53-77, 88-107, 134-137, 155-166, 180-185, 231-275, 280-293, 307-310, 324-328,
365)
2002 (gaps on days 1-3, 9-11, 22-26, 35-48, 109-113, 142-143, 169-268, 338-344)
2003 (gaps on days 7-28, 31-62, 146-149, 157-160, 168-173, 224-234, 240-268, 299-311, 352-355)
2004 (gaps on days 1-5, 13-22, 127, 131138, 154-162; end day 162)

Rarotonga, Cook Islands MF radar:


2002 (gaps on days 34, 142-144, 231-241, 258-266, 330-334)
2003 (gaps on days 17-32, 94-100, 202-205, 224-227, 252-260, 275-278, 329-332, 349-351, 359-361)
2004 (gaps on days 1-145, 204-206; end day 206)

Rothera, Antarctica MF radar:


2002 (gaps on days 1-78, 108-113, 225-233, 249-255, 273-300, 308-312; end day 312)
2003 (gaps on days 1-36, 41-43, 267-269, 299-311, 325-328)
2004 (gaps on days 88-90, 138-145, 208-213, 271-299, 310-330)

65
Saskatoon, Canada MF radar:
2002 (gaps on days 38-42, 70-77, 227-231, 239-248, 250-255)
2003 (gaps on days 31-32, 151-153, 252-256, 299-303, 319, 342-344)
2004 (gaps on days 1-34, 40-48, 206-207, 239-243, 312)
2005 (gaps on days 2-206, 212-242, 251-255, 296-298; end day 298)

Tromsø, Norway MF radar:


2002 (gaps on days 8-9, 24-27, 33-35, 41-44, 75-76, 109-113, 117-122, 226, 233-236, 267-269, 281, 294-296,
341-342, 350)
2003 (gaps on days 15, 28-34, 51, 70-72, 76-78, 80-83, 100-104, 146-147, 298-302, 306-307)
2004 (gaps on days 1-34, 217-219, 310-315, 326-366)
2005 (gaps on days 1-207, 213-241, 250-256; end day 256)

Wakkanai, Japan MF radar:


2001 (gaps on days 3-15, 91-92, 157-208, 225-228, 239-242, 261-267, 303-317, 326-328)
2002 (gaps on days 33-36, 58, 115-117, 151-167, 257-260, 340-341)
2003 (gaps on days 38-40, 180-181)
2004 (gaps on days 1-10, 33-230, 250-257, 292-322, 337-345, 364-366)
2005 (gaps on days 1-8, 63-71; end day 71)

Yamagawa, Japan MF radar:


2001 (gaps on days 17-20, 82-100, 208, 210-211, 226-249, 251-254, 273-280, 345-354)
2002 (gaps on days 71-73, 78-79, 135-139, 149-155, 194-198, 240-255, 289-292, 349)
2003 (gaps on days 1-7, 17, 32, 48-62, 71, 74-80, 82, 85-92, 96-98, 111-120, 164-166, 171-182; end day 182)
2004 (gaps on days 1-10, 25-28, 33-35; end day 35)

Parameter Codes List


Some of the short names were changed to avoid operators (+,-) in them and to avoid duplicate names.

Sorted by code number

code description factor units name


----- ---------------------------------------- ------------- ------

(Time Related Codes:)

9 Beginning year (universal time) 1. yr byear


10 Year (universal time) 1. yr year
15 Year (UT) of analysis date 1. yr yranal
19 Beginning month/day (universal time) 1. mmdd bmd
20 Month/day (universal time) 1. mmdd md
21 Day number of year (universal time) 1. day dayno
22 Model Day number of year (UT, 1=Jan 1) 1. day mdano
25 Month/day (UT) of analysis date 1. mmdd mdanal
28 Beginning hour/min (universal time) 1. hhmm bhm
29 Beginning additional increment to hhmm 1.E-02 s bhmi
30 Hour/min (universal time) 1. hhmm hm
31 Centiseconds (UT, increment to hhmm) 1.E-02 s hmi
34 Time past 0000 UT 1.E-03 hour uth
36 Time past 0000 UT 1.E+01 s uts
37 Additional increment to time past 0 UT 1.E-03 s utsi
42 Local solar time diff (=SLT-UT) +E lon 1. hhmm sltmut
44 Local solar time 1.E-03 hour slt
47 Local solar time at conjugate point 1.E-03 hour sltc
54 Magnetic local time 1.E-03 hour Tmlt
60 Integration time for these data 1. s inttms
61 Integration time for these data 1. min inttmm
62 Integration time for these data 1. day datntd
66 Time increment between rows 1. s dtrow

66
70 Sampling interval (time between sampls) 1. s smpint
72 UT of Moonset (from US Naval Obs) 1.E-03 hour tmset
73 UT of Moonrise (from US Naval Obs) 1.E-03 hour tmris
74 UT of Civil sunset (szen=96 deg) 1.E-03 hour tssc
75 UT of Civil sunrise (szen=96 deg) 1.E-03 hour tsrc
76 UT of Nautical sunset (szen=102 deg) 1.E-03 hour tssn
77 UT of Nautical sunrise (szen=102 deg) 1.E-03 hour tsrn
78 UT of Astronomical sunset (szen=108 deg) 1.E-03 hour tssa
79 UT of Astronomical sunrise (szen=108deg) 1.E-03 hour tsra
80 Time delay 1.E-01 min td
84 Daily mean time delay 1.E-01 min tda
94 Scan type (0=any,1=fixed,2=az,3=el) 1. scntyp
95 Cycle sequence number (e.g., 5th cycle) 1. cycn
96 Position number within cycle 1. posn
97 End of event flag (0=off, 1=on) 1. posf

(Geographic Coordinate Codes:)

106 Minimum altitude 1. km altb


107 Additional increment to min alt 1.E-01 m alti
108 Maximum altitude 1. km alte
109 Additional increment to max alt 1.E-01 m altei
110 Altitude (height) 1. km gdalt
111 Additional increment to altitude 1.E-01 m gdalti
112 Normalizing altitude 1. km rhaltn
113 Additional increment to normalizing alt 1.E-01 m rhalti
114 Number of samples in range ave 1. nsmpru
115 Altitude averaging interval 1. km altav
116 Additional increment to ht avgng intrvl 1.E-01 m altavi
117 Virtual height 1.E-01 km altv
120 Range 1. km range
121 Additional increment to range 1.E-01 m rangei
125 Width of range gate 1. km rgate
126 Additional increment to rnge gate width 1.E-01 m rgatei
127 Range gate number 1. rgatn
130 Mean azimuth angle (0=geog N,90=east) 1.E-02 deg azm
132 Beginning azimuth (0=geog N,90=east) 1.E-02 deg az1
133 Ending azimuth (0=geog N,90=east) 1.E-02 deg az2
135 Variation in azimuth (end Az - beg Az) 1.E-02 deg daz
140 Elevation angle (0=horizontal,90=vert) 1.E-02 deg elm
142 Beginning elevation angle 1.E-02 deg el1
143 Ending elevation angle 1.E-02 deg el2
145 Variation in elevation (end El-beg El) 1.E-02 deg del
150 Horiz great crcl dist from ref lat/lon 1. km gcdist
153 Reference geod latitude (N hemi=pos) 1.E-02 deg gdlatr
156 Reference geodetic longitude 1.E-02 deg gdlonr
160 Geodetic latitude of measurement 1.E-02 deg gdlat
170 Geodetic longitude of measurement 1.E-02 deg glon
180 Solar zenith angle 1.E-02 deg sunzen
181 Solar azimuth angle 1.E-02 deg sunaz
183 Conjugate solar zenith angle 1.E-02 deg szenc
186 Earth's Shadow altitude (height) 1. km sdwht
188 Shadow distance (l-o-s terminator dist) 1. km sdwd
190 Half scattering angle (bistatic system) 1.E-02 deg hsa
191 Hour angle HA=LSidT-RA (equatorial coor) 1.E-03 hour eqhha
192 Right ascension RA (equatorial coords) 1.E-03 hour eqhra
193 Galactic longitude b (galactic coords) 1.E-02 deg gallon
194 Declination angle (equatorial coords) 1.E-02 deg eqddec
195 Galactic latitude l (galactic coords) 1.E-02 deg gallat

(Magnetic Coordinate Codes:)

204 Northward component of geomagnetic fld 1.E-08 T bn


206 Eastward component of geomagnetic field 1.E-08 T be
208 Downward component of geomagnetic field 1.E-08 T bd
210 Geomagnetic field strength 1.E-08 T bmag
213 Geomagnetic field east declination 1.E-02 deg bdec
216 Geomagnetic field downward inclination 1.E-02 deg binc
218 L value in measurement volume 1.E-02 lshell
220 Dip latitude in measurement volume 1.E-02 deg diplat
222 Invariant latitude in measurement vol 1.E-02 deg invlat
224 Geomagnetic (centered dipole) latitude 1.E-02 deg gdilat
225 PACE magnetic latitude of meas volume 1.E-02 deg paclat
226 Apex latitude in measurement volume 1.E-02 deg aplat
230 PACE magnetic azimuth 1.E-02 deg pacaz
244 Geomagnetic (cntrd dipol) east longitud 1.E-02 deg gdilon
245 PACE magnetic longitude of meas volume 1.E-02 deg paclon
246 Apex longitude in measurement volume 1.E-02 deg aplon
277 Begin X Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re xgsmb
278 End X Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re xgsme
279 Begin Y Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re ygsmb
280 End Y Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re ygsme
281 Begin Z Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re zgsmb
282 End Z Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re zgsme
283 Begin X Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re xgseb
284 End X Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re xgsee
285 Begin Y Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re ygseb
286 End Y Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re ygsee
287 Begin Z Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re zgseb
288 End Z Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re zgsee
292 X Coord Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re xgsm
293 Y Coord Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re ygsm
294 Z Coord Geocentric Solar Magnetospheric 1.E-02 Re zgsm
295 X Coordinate Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re xgse
296 Y Coordinate Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re ygse
297 Z Coordinate Geocentric Solar Ecliptic 1.E-02 Re zgse

(Geophysical Indices:)

310 Kp Index 1.E-01 kp

67
319 Polar Cap Index 1.E-01 pci
320 Ae Index (1 or 2.5 min sample) 1. nT ae
321 Al Index (1 or 2.5 min sample) 1. nT al
322 Au Index (1 or 2.5 min sample) 1. nT au
323 Ao Index (1 or 2.5 min sample) 1. nT ao
324 Ae Index (hourly mean) 1. nT aem
325 Al Index (hourly mean) 1. nT alm
326 Au Index (hourly mean) 1. nT aum
327 Ao Index (hourly mean) 1. nT aom
330 Dst index 1. nT dst
335 ap index (3-hourly) 1. ap3
340 AP index (daily) 1. ap
341 aa index 1. aa
350 F10.7 solar flux (Sa) 1.E-23 W/m2/Hz f107a
351 F10.7 solar flux qualifier 1. f107qa
352 F10.7 Multiday average 1.E-23 W/m2/Hz fbara
353 352's avg code: 1=>81day ; 2=13mon 1. fbarta
354 F10.7 solar flux observed (Ottawa) 1.E-23 W/m2/Hz f10.7
355 F10.7 solar flux qualifier observed 1. f10.7q
356 F10.7 Multiday average observed 1.E-23 W/m2/Hz fbar
357 356's avg code: 1=>81day ; 2=13mon 1. fbart
360 Sunspot number 1. sspotn
363 Estim. Total Hemispheric Power Input 1.E+08 W tepow
364 Estim. Ion Hemispheric Power Input 1.E+08 W iepow
365 Estim. Electron Hemispheric Power Input 1.E+08 W eepow
366 Estimated Hemispheric Power Index 1. epowi
367 Estimated Hemispheric Power Qualifier 1. epowq
368 Estimated Hemispheric Pwr Corr. Factor 1.E-03 epowf
370 Est mag lat 0MLT equatorwd aurora bndry 1.E-02 deg eqb0

(Parameters Relevent to Data Quality:)

401 Lag to the first range gate 1.E-06 sec lag1


402 Pulse length 1.E-06 sec pl
404 Density sampling time 1.E-06 sec denst
406 Spectral sampling time 1.E-06 sec spcst
407 Interpulse Period; or 408 increment 1.E-06 sec ippi
408 Interpulse Period 1.E-02 sec ipp
410 Signal to noise ratio 1.E-02 sn
411 Signal to noise ratio 1.E-03 snp3
412 log10 (signal to noise ratio) 1.E-03 lg snl
413 No samples available in time average 1. nsmpta
414 No samples used in time average 1.E+04 nsmptu
415 No smpls in time avg; or 414 incremnt 1. nsmpti
417 No samples used in Fourier transform 1. nsmfft
418 No ACF lags calculated 1. nlags
419 No samples used 1. nsmpu
420 Reduced-chi square of fit 1.E-03 chisq
421 Reduced-chi square of fit 1.E-01 chip1
422 No. samples in dir. 1 avg. (eastward) 1. nsmpd1
423 No. samples in dir. 2 avg. (northward) 1. nsmpd2
424 No. samples in dir. 3 avg. (upward) 1. nsmpd3
425 Wide reduced-chi square of fit 1.E+00 wchisq
426 Additional increment to wide chi square 1.E-04 wchsqi
430 Goodness of fit 1. gfit
431 Code baud length 1. cbadl
432 No. bauds in code 1. cbadn
433 Code type (0=non,1=cmplmntry) 1. codt
434 No incoherent integrations 1. iin
440 Cloud cover (0-8=clr-ovcst;9=obscured) 1. octa cloudc
441 Cloud cover from lowest level clouds 1. octa cloud1
442 Cloud cover in tenths (0=clr,10=ovcst) 1. tenths clou10
445 Aurora sighted Flag (0=no, 1=yes) 1. aurf
451 Jicamarca data quality code 1 1. jidqc1
452 Jicamarca data quality code 2 1. jidqc2
453 Jicamarca data quality code 3 1. jidqc3
454 Jicamarca data quality code 4 1. jidqc4
455 Jicamarca data quality code 5 1. jidqc5
456 Arecibo data quality code 1 (IFIT) 1. aodqc1
457 Arecibo data quality code 2 1. aodqc2
458 Arecibo data quality code 3 1. aodqc3
459 Arecibo data quality code 4 1. aodqc4
460 Arecibo data quality code 5 1. aodqc5
461 Millstone Hill data quality code 1 1. mhdqc1
462 Millstone Hill data quality code 2 1. mhdqc2
463 Millstone Hill data quality code 3 1. mhdqc3
464 Millstone Hill data quality code 4 1. mhdqc4
465 Millstone Hill data quality code 5 1. mhdqc5
466 St. Santin data quality code 1 1. ssdqc1
467 St. Santin data quality code 2 1. ssdqc2
468 St. Santin data quality code 3 1. ssdqc3
469 St. Santin data quality code 4 1. ssdqc4
470 St. Santin data quality code 5 1. ssdqc5
471 Chatanika/Sondrestrom data qual code 1 1. chdqc1
472 Chatanika/Sondrestrom data qual code 2 1. chdqc2
473 MUSCOX Fit Code 1. chdqc3
474 Res. Vel. Pairing Code 1. chdqc4
475 Chatinika/Sondrestrom data qual code 5 1. chdqc5
476 EISCAT data quality code 1 1. eidqc1
477 EISCAT data quality code 2 1. eidqc2
478 EISCAT data quality code 3 1. eidqc3
479 EISCAT data quality code 4 1. eidqc4
480 EISCAT data quality code 5 1. eidqc5
482 System temperature 1. K systmp
483 Additional increment to system temp 1.E-04 K systmi
484 Calibration temperature 1. K caltmp
486 Peak power 1. kW power
490 Transmitted frequency 1.E+05 Hz tfreq
492 Received doppler frequency offset 1. Hz rcdfo
494 Receiver bandwidth 1. kHz rcbw

68
496 Receiver delay time 1.E-06 sec rcdt
498 Number of frequencies used 1. nfrequ
499 Number of laser shots per second 1. sec-1 nlshts

(Basic Ionospheric Parameters:)

500 Uncorrected electron density (Te/Ti=1) 1.E+09 m-3 neuc


501 Uncorrected electron density increment 1.E+05 m-3 neuci
502 Uncorrected electron density 1.E+08 m-3 neuc8
505 log10 (uncorrected electron density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) neucl
510 Electron density 1.E+09 m-3 ne
511 Additional increment to code 510 (Ne) 1.E+05 m-3 nei
512 Electron density 1.E+08 m-3 ne8
520 log10 (Ne in m-3) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nel
522 Line integrated electron density 1.E+15 m-2 neli
523 log10 (integrated electron density) 1.E-03 lg(m-2) nehil
524 Vertically integrated electron density 1.E+15 m-2 tec
525 log10 (Vert. integrated electron den.) 1.E-03 lg(m-2) tecl
530 Maximum electron density 1.E+09 m-3 nemax
531 Maximum uncorrected electron density 1.E+09 m-3 neucmx
535 log10 (max Ne in m-3) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nemaxl
536 log10 (max uncorrected Ne in m-3) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) neucml
540 Height of maximum electron density 1. km hmax
541 Scale ht of Chapman model electron den 1. km hschap
550 Ion temperature 1. K ti
552 Ion temperature 1.E-01 K tip1
560 Electron temperature 1. K te
570 Temperature ratio (Te/Ti) 1.E-03 tr
580 Line of sight ion velocity (pos = away) 1. m/s vo
581 Additional increment to code 580 1.E-04 m/s voi
585 Ion Velocity spread (spectral width) 1. m/s vos
590 Bisector ion vel (bistatic sys,pos=up) 1. m/s vobi
600 Velocity direction - local azimuth 1.E-02 deg voaz
610 Velocity direction - local elevation 1.E-02 deg voel
620 Ion Composition - [O+]/Ne 1.E-03 pop
630 Ion Composition - [NO+]/Ne 1.E-03 pnop
640 Ion Composition - [O2+]/Ne 1.E-03 po2p
650 Ion Composition - [HE+]/Ne 1.E-03 phep
660 Ion Composition - [H+]/Ne 1.E-03 php
690 Ion Composition - [mol wt 28 to 32]/Ne 1.E-03 pmp
691 Mean mol wt for ions from 28 to 32 1.E-02 AMU mmwt30
710 Ion-neutral collision frequency 1. s-1 co
720 log10 (ion-neutral collision frequency) 1.E-03 lg(s-1) col

(Neutral Atmosphere Parameters:)

800 Line of sight neutral vel (pos = away) 1. m/s vnlu


801 Additional increment to Neutral Vlos 1.E-04 m/s vnlui
802 Line of sight neutral vel (pos = away) 1.E-02 m/s vnlu2
803 Line of sight neutral vel (pos = away) 1.E-03 m/s vnlu3
805 Neutral velocity spread 1.E-02 m/s vnus
806 Neutral velocity spread 1.E-03 m/s vnus3
810 Neutral temperature 1. K tn
811 Model Neutral temperature 1.E-01 K tnm
812 Neutral temperature 1.E-01 K tn1
813 Relative neutral temperature 1. tnrel
820 Exospheric temperature 1. K tinf
821 Model Exospheric temperature 1. K tinfm
829 Neutral gas mean molecular weight 1.E-02 AMU gmwn
830 log10 (neutral mass density) 1.E-03 lg(Kg/m3 mol
840 log10 (neutral number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) ntotl
842 log10 (relative neutral number density) 1.E-03 lg nrtotl
850 log10 (N2 number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nn2l
860 log10 (O2 number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) no2l
870 log10 (O number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nol
871 scale factor to model [O] profile 1.E-02 fO
880 log10 (AR number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) narl
890 log10 (HE number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nhel
900 log10 (H number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nhl
901 log10 (NO number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nnol
902 log10 (N(4S) number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nn4sl
903 log10 (N(2D) number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nn2dl
904 log10 (Na number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nnal
905 log10 (Fe number density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nfel
910 log10 (Neutral pressure) 1.E-03 lg(Pa) npresl
920 Pressure scale height 1.E+01 m psh

(Harmonic Analysis:)

921 Number of coefficients in analysis 1. nc


922 Number of directions in analysis 1. nd
923 Groves coefficient number 1. gcn
924 Groves coefficient 1.E-02 m/s gc
925 Number of hours filled in harm anal 1. hr nhf
926 Eastwd Residual Sqrt[1/N*sum(ui-uf)**2] 1.E-02 m/s vneres
927 Northwd Residual Sqrt[1/N*sum(vi-vf)**2] 1.E-02 m/s vnnres
928 Upwd Residual Sqrt[1/N*sum(wi-wf)**2] 1.E-03 m/s vnures
934 Mean upward neutral wind 1.E-03 m/s vnua
935 Mean eastward neutral wind 1.E-02 m/s vnea
936 Mean northward neutral wind 1.E-02 m/s vnna
937 Mean neutral temperature 1.E-01 K tna
939 Mean ion temperature 1.E-01 K tia
940 24-h eastward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vne24a
941 24-h northwrd neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vnn24a
942 24-h neutral temperature amplitude 1.E-02 K tn24a
943 24-h eastward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-01 m/s vne2a1
944 24-h ion temperature amplitude 1.E-02 K ti24a
945 24-h max eastward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vne24p
946 24-h max northwrd neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vnn24p
947 24-h max neutral temperature phase 1.E-03 hr tn24p

69
948 24-h northward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-01 m/s vnn2p1
949 24-h max ion temperature phase 1.E-03 hr ti24p
950 12-h eastward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vne12a
951 12-h northward neutrl wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vnn12a
952 12-h neutral temperature amplitude 1.E-02 K tn12a
953 log10 (12-h geopotential amplitude) 1.E-03 lg(m2/s2 pt12al
954 12-h ion temperature amplitude 1.E-02 K ti12a
955 12-h max eastward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vne12p
956 12-h max northward neutrl wind phase 1.E-03 hr vnn12p
957 12-h max neutral temperature phase 1.E-03 hr tn12p
958 12-h max geopotential phase 1.E-03 hr pt12p
959 12-h max ion temperature phase 1.E-03 hr ti12p
960 8-h eastward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vne08a
961 8-h northward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vnn08a
962 8-h neutral temperature amp 1.E-02 K tn08a
965 8-h max eastward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vne08p
966 8-h max northward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vnn08p
967 8-h max neutral temperature phase 1.E-03 hr tn08p
970 2-dy eastward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vne2da
971 2-dy northward neutrl wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vnn2da
975 2-dy max eastward neutral wind phase 1.E-02 hr vne2dp
976 2-dy max northward neutrl wind phase 1.E-02 hr vnn2dp
980 2-day component period 1.E-02 hr p2d
981 UT day no rel to 2-dy comp phase 1. day dn2dp
982 UT at start of 2-day comp calc 1. hhmm ut2dp
984 24-h upward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-03 m/s wn24a
985 12-h upward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-03 m/s wn12a
986 24-h upward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-04 m/s vnu24a
987 24-h max upward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vnu24p
988 12-h upward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-04 m/s vnu12a
989 12-h max upward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vnu12p
990 6-h eastward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vne06a
991 6-h northward neutral wind amplitude 1.E-02 m/s vnn06a
992 6-h neutral temperature amplitude 1.E-02 K tn06a
995 6-h max eastward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vne06p
996 6-h max northward neutral wind phase 1.E-03 hr vnn06p
997 6-h max neutral temperature phase 1.E-03 hr tn06p

(Unit Vector Definitions:)

1010 Geographic unit vector rotation angle 1.E-02 deg gdra


1020 Magnetic unit vector rotation angle 1.E-02 deg gmra
1030 Direction 7 Azimuth angle 1.E-02 deg az7
1040 Direction 7 Elevation angle 1.E-02 deg el7
1050 Direction 8 Azimuth angle 1.E-02 deg az8
1060 Direction 8 Elevation angle 1.E-02 deg el8
1070 Direction 9 Azimuth angle 1.E-02 deg az9
1080 Direction 9 Elevation angle 1.E-02 deg el9
1085 Direction 10 Azimuth angle 1.E-02 deg az10
1090 Direction 10 Elevation angle 1.E-02 deg el10

(Vector Quantities:)

1210 Direction 1 Ion velocity (eastward) 1. m/s vie


1211 Direction 1 F-region ion velocity 1. m/s vief
1220 Direction 2 Ion velocity (northward) 1. m/s vin
1221 Direction 2 F-region ion velocity 1. m/s vinf
1230 Direction 3 Ion velocity (up) 1. m/s viu
1240 Direction 4 Ion velocity (perp east) 1. m/s vipe
1241 Direction 4 Ion velocity (perp east) 1.E-01 m/s vipe1
1242 Direction 4 Ion velocity (perp east) 1.E-02 m/s vipe2
1250 Direction 5 Ion velocity (perp north) 1. m/s vipn
1252 Direction 5 Ion velocity (perp north) 1.E-02 m/s vipn2
1260 Direction 6 Ion velocity (antiparallel) 1. m/s viap
1270 Direction 7 Ion velocity 1. m/s vi7
1272 Direction 7 Ion velocity 1.E-02 m/s vi72
1280 Direction 8 Ion velocity 1. m/s vi8
1282 Direction 8 Ion velocity 1.E-02 m/s vi82
1290 Direction 9 Ion velocity 1. m/s vi9
1300 Direction 10 Ion velocity 1. m/s vi10
1410 Direction 1 Neutral wind (eastward) 1. m/s vne
1411 Direction 1 Neutral wind (eastward) 1.E-01 m/s vnep1
1412 Direction 1 Neutral wind (eastward) 1.E-02 m/s vnep2
1420 Direction 2 Neutral wind (northward) 1. m/s vnn
1421 Direction 2 Neutral wind (northward) 1.E-01 m/s vnnp1
1422 Direction 2 Neutral wind (northward) 1.E-02 m/s vnnp2
1430 Direction 3 Neutral wind (up) 1.E-02 m/s vnu
1431 Direction 3 Neutral wind (up) 1.E-01 m/s vnup1
1432 Direction 3 Corrupt Neutral wind (up) 1.E-02 m/s vnuc
1440 Direction 4 Neutral wind (perp east) 1. m/s vnpe
1450 Direction 5 Neutral wind (perp north) 1. m/s vnpn
1455 Direction 5 Neutral wind horizontl comp 1. m/s vnpnh
1456 Direction 5 Neutral wind horizontl comp 1.E-01 m/s vnpnh1
1460 Direction 6 Neutral wind 1. m/s vnap
1470 Direction 7 Neutral wind 1. m/s vn7
1475 Direction 7 Neutral wind horizontl comp 1. m/s vn7
1480 Direction 8 Neutral wind 1. m/s vn8
1490 Direction 9 Neutral wind 1. m/s vn9
1610 Direction 1 electric field (eastward) 1.E-05 V/m ee
1620 Direction 2 electric field (northward) 1.E-05 V/m en
1630 Direction 3 electric field (up) 1.E-05 V/m eu
1640 Direction 4 electric field (perp east) 1.E-05 V/m epe
1650 Direction 5 electric field (perp north) 1.E-05 V/m epn
1660 Direction 6 electric field (antipara) 1.E-05 V/m eap
1670 Direction 7 electric field 1.E-05 V/m e7
1680 Direction 8 electric field 1.E-05 V/m e8
1690 Direction 9 electric field 1.E-05 V/m e9
1810 Direction 1 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 je
1820 Direction 2 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 jn
1830 Direction 3 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 ju

70
1840 Direction 4 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 jpe
1850 Direction 5 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 jpn
1860 Direction 6 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 jap
1870 Direction 7 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 j7
1880 Direction 8 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 j8
1890 Direction 9 electric current density 1.E-08 A/m2 j9
1910 Ht integral: dir 1 current density 1.E-03 A/m jehi
1920 Ht integral: dir 2 current density 1.E-03 A/m jnhi
1940 Line int (1 hemi): dir 4 current den 1.E-03 A/m jpeli
1950 Line int (1 hemi): dir 5 current den 1.E-03 A/m jpnli

(Conductivities:)

2010 Pedersen conductivity 1.E-06 mho/m cp


2011 log10 (Pedersen Conductivity in mho/m3) 1.E-03 lg(mho/m cpl
2020 Hall conductivity 1.E-06 mho/m ch
2021 log10 (Hall Conductivity) 1.E-03 lg(mho/m chl
2040 Height integral pedersen conductivity 1.E-02 mho cphi
2050 Height integral hall conductivity 1.E-02 mho chhi
2070 Field line integral(1 hemi) Ped Cond 1.E-02 mho cpli
2080 Field line integral(1 hemi) Hall Cond 1.E-02 mho chli

(Energy Parameters:)

2110 Particle energy specific heating rate 1.E-08 W/m3 qpartv


2120 Joule energy specific heating rate 1.E-08 W/m3 qjoulv
2121 log10 (joule energy spec. heat rate) 1.E-03 lg(W/m3) qjouvl
2130 Electron energy flux 1.E-05 W/m2 fee
2131 log10 (electron energy flux) 1.E-03 lg(W/m2) feel
2133 Positive ion (proton) energy flux 1.E-05 W/m2 fep
2134 log10 (positive ion energy flux) 1.E-03 lg(W/m2) fepl
2136 Particle (el. and pos. ion) energy flux 1.E-05 W/m2 fepart
2137 log10 (particle energy flux) 1.E-03 lg(W/m2) feparl
2139 Particle energy heat rate height int. 1.E-05 W/m2 qparth
2140 Particle energy heat rate height int. 1.E-04 W/m2 qpart1
2141 log10 (part energy heat rate ht. int.) 1.E-03 lg(W/m2) qpartl
2142 Particle energy heat rate hemisph.int. 1.E+08 W qparhe
2150 Joule energy heat rate height integral 1.E-04 W/m2 qjoulh
2151 log10 (Joule heat rate height int.) 1.E-03 lg(W/m2) qjoull
2152 Joule heat rate hemisphere integrated 1.E+08 W qjouhe
2155 Average electron energy 1. eV e0
2156 Auroral flux type: maxwellian=1,gauss=2 1. afty
2157 Characteristic electron energy 1. eV ece
2158 log10 (characteristic electron energy) 1.E-03 lg(eV) ecel
2159 Characteristic pos. ion (proton) energy 1. eV ecp
2160 log10 (characteristic pos. ion energy) 1.E-03 lg(eV) ecpl
2170 Particle energy heat rate fld-line int. 1.E-04 W/m2 qpartf
2180 Joule energy heat rate fld-line integ. 1.E-04 W/m2 qjoulf

(Interplanetary Magnetic Field:)

2204 Interplanetary Mag Field Bx GSM 1.E-11 T bxgsm


2206 Interplanetary Mag Field By GSM 1.E-11 T bygsm
2208 Interplanetary Mag Field Bz GSM 1.E-11 T bzgsm
2210 Interplanetary Mag Field strength 1.E-11 T bimf
2214 Interplanetary Mag Field Bx GSE 1.E-11 T bxgse
2216 Interplanetary Mag Field By GSE 1.E-11 T bygse
2218 Interplanetary Mag Field Bz GSE 1.E-11 T bzgse
2232 Solar Wind Plasma Density 1.E+05 m-3 swden
2234 Solar Wind Plasma Speed 1.E+02 m/s swspd
2236 IMF/Solar Wind Qualifier 1. swq
2244 Solar Wind velocity GSM x component 1.E+02 m/s swvxm
2246 Solar Wind velocity GSM y component 1.E+02 m/s swvym
2248 Solar Wind velocity GSM z component 1.E+02 m/s swvzm

(Miscellaneous Scalar Quantities:)

2301 Polar cap potential difference 1.E+01 V pcp


2302 Potential minimum 1.E+01 V pcmn
2303 Potential maximum 1.E+01 V pcmx
2310 Electric Potential 1.E+01 V ep

(Spectral Parameters:)

2400 Wavelength 1.E-01 nm wavlen


2401 Beginning wavelength 1.E-01 nm bwavl
2402 Ending wavelength 1.E-01 nm ewavl
2411 Beginning wavenumber 1. cm-1 bwavn
2412 Ending wavenumber 1. cm-1 ewavn
2415 Local standard of rest velocity (VLSR) 1.E-02 km/s vlsr
2416 Spectral displ. in vel units w arb 0 1.E-02 km/s spdvel
2421 Channel 1 Wavelength 1.E-01 nm wavl1
2422 Channel 2 Wavelength 1.E-01 nm wavl2
2423 Channel 3 Wavelength 1.E-01 nm wavl3
2424 Channel 4 Wavelength 1.E-01 nm wavl4
2455 Refernce rel 1/2-width (arb press unit) 1.E-02 wid2
2456 Relative 1/2-width deviation from 2455 1.E-02 wid2r
2491 log10 (Counts) 1.E-03 lg countl
2495 log10 (Rayleigh counts) 1.E-03 lg rcontl
2500 line/band brightness 1. R br
2501 log10 (line/band brightness) 1.E-03 lg(R) brl
2502 line/band brightness 1.E-01 R br1
2505 Relative line/band brightness 1. rbr
2506 log10 (Relative line/band brightness) 1.E-03 lg rbrl
2507 Relative line emission rate 1.E-01 rlep1
2508 Relative emission rate 1.E-02 rlep2
2509 Relative emission rate 1.E-03 rlep3
2511 Channel 1 line/band brightness 1.E+01 R br1
2512 Channel 2 line/band brightness 1.E+01 R br2
2513 Channel 3 line/band brightness 1.E+01 R br3

71
2514 Channel 4 line/band brightness 1.E+01 R br4
2521 Channel 1 Calibration (cnt/s over R) 1.E-02 cnt/s/R cal1
2522 Channel 2 Calibration (cnt/s over R) 1.E-02 cnt/s/R cal2
2523 Channel 3 Calibration (cnt/s over R) 1.E-02 cnt/s/R cal3
2524 Channel 4 Calibration (cnt/s over R) 1.E-02 cnt/s/R cal4
2530 log10 (Total 630 nm volume emis.) 1.E-03 lgp/cm3s v630l
2531 log10 (Thermal 630 nm volume emis.) 1.E-03 lgp/cm3s v630tl
2532 log10 (Dissoc-Recomb 630 nm vol.emis.) 1.E-03 lgp/cm3s v630dl
2555 Relative background radiance 1. rbrad
2560 Log10 (background noise, residual) 1.E-03 lg(R) bnl
2561 log10 (background counts) 1.E-03 lg bcl
2571 Channel 1 Background correction 1. R bkgc1
2572 Channel 2 Background correction 1. R bkgc2
2573 Channel 3 Background correction 1. R bkgc3
2574 Channel 4 Background correction 1. R bkgc4
2600 Diffuse aurora ratio (Ch1/Ch4) 1.E-02 daurr
2601 Normalized Brightness ratio (Ch1/Ch4) 1.E-03 brrn

(I.S. Radar Operation Parameters:)

3100 JRO normalizing factor (JRO661111A) 1.E-04 jronf1


3101 JRO W beam log10(1+RxA incoh. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR paiwl
3102 JRO W beam log10(1+RxA coher. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR pacwl
3103 JRO W beam log10(1+RxB incoh. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR pbiwl
3104 JRO W beam log10(1+RxB coher. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR pbcwl
3105 JRO E beam log10(1+RxC incoh. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR pciel
3106 JRO E beam log10(1+RxC coher. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR pccel
3107 JRO E beam log10(1+RxD incoh. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR pdiel
3108 JRO E beam log10(1+RxD coher. pwr/noise) 1.E-03 lg 1+SNR pdcel
3109 JRO parameter 10 1. jro10
3110 JRO parameter 11 1. jro11
.
.
.
3199 JRO parameter 100 1. jro100
3200 ARO parameter 1 1. aro01
3201 ARO parameter 2 1. aro02
3202 ARO parameter 3 1. aro03
.
.
.
3299 ARO parameter 100 1. aro100
3300 MLH Mode Letter (65-80 = A-P) 1. mlhm
3301 MLH Power Normalization constant 1.e-03 pnorm
3302 MLH Number of signal samples in profile 1.e+00 nrp
3303 MLH Number of noise samples in profile 1.e+00 nnsamp
3304 MLH Number calibration samples in prof 1.e+00 ncsamp
3305 MLH parameter 6 1.e+00 mlh6
3306 MLH Number profile Noise level samples 1.e+00 npnswp
3307 MLH parameter 8 1.e+00 mlh8
3308 MLH Number of Radar Sweeps for Record 1.e+00 nrswp
3309 MLH Number noise gates in radar sweep 1.e+00 nnrswp
3310 MLH Mean power prof Normalizatn Const 1.e+00 pnrmmp
3311 MLH H+ Line of site velocity 1.e+00 m/s vh
3312 MLH H Number Density 1.e+00 nh
3313 MLH ACF Normalization Factor 1.e-03 fa
3314 MLH Transmitter channel signal to noise 1.e-02 xmtsnr
3315 MLH Signal Temperature 1.e+00 K stp
3316 MLH Profile Power Normalized to 1.0 1.e-03 popn
3317 MLH Reflected Power 1.e+00 po
3318 MLH D.P. Power Normalization constant 1.e-03 pnrmd
3319 MLH Additional increment to DP Pwr Nrm C 1.e-07 pnrmdi
3320 MLH Transmitter phase velocity 1.e-01 m/s trphvl
3321 MLH Ti, Tr correlation coefficient 1.e-03 cctitr
3322 MLH Ti, Ph correlation coefficient 1.e-03 cctiph
3323 MLH Ti, Co correlation coefficient 1.e-03 cctico
3324 MLH Tr, Ph correlation coefficient 1.e-03 cctrph
3325 MLH Mode type 1.e+00 mlhmod
3326 MLH Universal Time (Hours MOD 24) 1.e-03 hour ut
3327 MLH Local Time (Hours MOD 24) 1.e-03 hour lt
3328 MLH Fundamental Pulse Length 1.e-06 sec fundpl
3329 MLH Range resolution 1.e-02 km rngres
3330 MLH Apex Local Time (Hours MOD 24) 1.e+00 hour aplt
3331 MLH Bperp Directn Cosine (South [Apex]) 1.e+00 m/s cxr
3332 MLH Bperp Directn Cosine (East [Apex]) 1.e+00 m/s cyr
3333 MLH Directn Cosine (Up fld line [Apex]) 1.e+00 m/s czr
3334 MLH Cycle Time of Experiment 1.e+00 hour tcycle
3335 MLH Julian Day Number 1.e+00 day jdayno
3336 MLH Start UT (0 = 0000 1JAN50) 1.e+00 s ut1
3337 MLH End UT (0 = 0000 1JAN50) 1.e+00 s ut2
3338 MLH Variation in UT (UT2 - UT1) 1.e+00 s dut21
3339 MLH Instrument Code 1.e+00 kinst
3340 MLH Logical Record Number 1.e+00 recno
3341 MLH Start Range 1.e+00 km range1
3342 MLH End Range 1.e+00 km range2
3343 MLH Variation in Range (RANGE2 - RANGE1) 1.e+00 km drng21
3344 MLH Kind-of-data code 1.e+00 kindat
3345 MLH parameter 46 1.e+00 mlh46
3346 MLH Lag spacing 1.e-07 sec mlhlag
3347 MLH Num Samples SNR sum rule 1.e+00 nsamrl
3348 MLH Num steps SNR sum rule 1.e+00 nstprl
3349 MLH parameter 50 1.e+00 mlh50
3350 MLH Line of sight Doppler V(pos = away) 1.e+00 m/s vdopp
3351 MLH TI searching TI,TR,FN only 1.e+00 K tibf
3352 MLH TR searching TI,TR,FN only 1.e-03 trbf
3353 MLH Fit type code 1.e+00 fittyp
3354 MLH parameter 55 1.e+00 mlh55
3355 MLH parameter 56 1.e+00 mlh56
3356 MLH parameter 57 1.e+00 mlh57
3357 MLH parameter 58 1.e+00 mlh58

72
3358 MLH parameter 59 1.e+00 mlh59
3359 MLH parameter 60 1.e+00 mlh60
3360 MLH parameter 61 1.e+00 mlh61
3361 MLH parameter 62 1.e+00 mlh62
3362 MLH parameter 63 1.e+00 mlh63
3363 MLH Ephemeris Time 1.e+00 hour ephem
3364 MLH parameter 64 1.e+00 mlh64
3365 MLH parameter 66 1.e+00 mlh66
3366 MLH parameter 67 1.e+00 mlh67
3367 MLH parameter 68 1.e+00 mlh68
3368 MLH parameter 69 1.e+00 mlh69
3369 MLH FoF2 level 1.e-02 MHz fof2
3370 MLH parameter 71 1.e+00 mlh71
3371 MLH parameter 72 1.e+00 mlh72
3372 MLH Latitude Angle of Average Field Vec 1.e+00 deg flat
3373 MLH Longitude Ang. of Average Field Vec 1.e+00 deg flon
3374 MLH Plasma Temperature 1.e+00 K ptemp
3375 MLH parameter 76 1.e+00 mlh76
3376 MLH parameter 77 1.e+00 mlh77
3377 MLH Epsilon 1.e+00 eps
3378 MLH parameter 79 1.e+00 mlh79
3379 MLH parameter 80 1.e+00 mlh80
3380 MLH parameter 81 1.e+00 mlh81
3381 MLH parameter 82 1.e+00 mlh82
3382 MLH parameter 83 1.e+00 mlh83
3383 MLH parameter 84 1.e+00 mlh84
3384 MLH parameter 85 1.e+00 mlh85
3385 MLH Model Ion velocity in direction 4 1.e+00 m/s modvs
3386 MLH Model Ion velocity in direction 5 1.e+00 m/s modve
3387 MLH parameter 88 1.e+00 mlh88
3388 MLH parameter 89 1.e+00 mlh89
3389 MLH parameter 90 1.e+00 mlh90
3390 MLH parameter 91 1.e+00 mlh91
3391 MLH parameter 92 1.e+00 mlh92
3392 MLH parameter 93 1.e+00 mlh93
3393 MLH parameter 94 1.e+00 mlh94
3394 MLH parameter 95 1.e+00 mlh95
3395 MLH parameter 96 1.e+00 mlh96
3396 MLH parameter 97 1.e+00 mlh97
3397 MLH parameter 98 1.e+00 mlh98
3398 MLH parameter 99 1.e+00 mlh99
3399 MLH parameter 100 1.e+00 mlh100
3400 STS parameter 1 1. sts01
3401 STS parameter 2 1. sts02
3402 STS parameter 3 1. sts03
.
.
.
3499 STS parameter100 1. sts100
3500 SON FIT Code 1. fit
3501 SON EPEC E-Region source code 1. srce
3502 SON EPEC F-Region source code 1. srcf
3503 SON Source of temperature 1. srct
3504 SON Source of velocity 1. srcv
3505 SON Source of density profile 1. srcden
3506 SON parameter 7 1. sonp07
3507 SON parameter 8 1. sonp08
3508 SON parameter 9 1. sonp09
3509 SON parameter 10 1. sonp10
3510 SON Derivative of Ti with altitude 1.E-02 K/km dtidh
3511 SON Derivative of Te with altitude 1.E-02 K/km dtedh
3512 SON Portion of Umerid due to Vpar 1. m/s upar
3513 SON Umerid from ambipolar diffusn 1. m/s uambi
3514 SON Uambi from DNe/DH fit to ne 1. m/s uden1
3515 SON Uambi from DNe/DH fit to ln(ne) 1. m/s uden2
3516 SON portion of Uambi from dTp/dH 1. m/s utemp
3517 SON portion of Uambi from gravity 1. m/s ugrav
3518 SON Mean azimuth position 1 1.E-02 deg azm1
3519 SON Mean elevation position 1 1.E-02 deg elm1
3520 SON Mean azimuth position 2 1.E-02 deg azm2
3521 SON Mean elevation position 2 1.E-02 deg elm2
3522 SON Mean azimuth position 3 1.E-02 deg azm3
3523 SON Mean elevation position 3 1.E-02 deg elm3
3524 SON Mean azimuth position 4 1.E-02 deg azm4
3525 SON Mean elevation position 4 1.E-02 deg elm4
3526 SON Mean azimuth position 5 1.E-02 deg azm5
3527 SON Mean elevation position 5 1.E-02 deg elm5
3528 SON Mean azimuth position 6 1.E-02 deg azm6
3529 SON Mean elevation position 6 1.E-02 deg elm6
3530 SON Mean azimuth position 7 1.E-02 deg azm7
3531 SON Mean elevation position 7 1.E-02 deg elm7
3532 SON Mean azimuth position 8 1.E-02 deg azm8
3533 SON Mean elevation position 8 1.E-02 deg elm8
3534 SON Begin year of composite (UT) 1. UT yrcb
3535 SON Begin month/day of composite (UT) 1. UT mdb
3536 SON Begin hour/minute of composite (UT) 1. UT hmb
3537 SON Begin centisecond of composite (UT) 1.E-02 sec csb
3538 SON End year of composite (UT) 1. UT yrce
3539 SON End month/day of composite (UT) 1. UT mde
3540 SON End hour/minute of composite (UT) 1. UT hme
3541 SON End centisecond of composite (UT) 1.E-02 sec cse
3542 SON Type of density correction 1. dcor
3543 SON log10 (ionization rate el/m**3-s) 1.E-03 lg(e/m3s inzrl
3544 SON log10 (alpha effective in m**3/s) 1.E-03 lg(m3/s) alphrl
3545 SON log10 (part flux el/cm**2-s-kev) 1.E-03 lg(e/m2s pfluxl
3546 SON log10 (energy in kev) 1.E-03 lg(kev) el
3547 SON Parallel current density 1.E-09 A/m2 jpar
3548 SON Energy flux 1.E-04 W/m2 eflx
3549 SON Mean energy 1.E-03 kev em
3550 SON I(4278) 1. R i4278

73
3551 SON log10 (molecular ion density) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) midl
3552 SON Covariance xx 1. covxx
3553 SON Covariance xy 1. covxy
3554 SON Covariance xz 1. covxz
3555 SON Covariance yx 1. covyx
3556 SON Covariance yy 1. covyy
3557 SON Covariance yz 1. covyz
3558 SON Covariance zx 1. covzx
3559 SON Covariance zy 1. covzy
3560 SON Covariance zz 1. covzz
3561 SON Observed uncertainty on Ti 1. odti
3562 SON Reduced chi square of Ti 1.E-01 chiti
3563 SON Observed uncertainty on Te 1. odte
3564 SON Reduced chi square of Te 1.E-01 chite
3565 SON log10 (obs uncertainty Ne) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) odnel
3566 SON Reduced chi square of Ne 1.E-01 chine
3567 SON Amount subtracted from Vlos 1. m/s vbias
3568 SON log10 (ne-parabolic fit to ln(ne)) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) fitnel
3569 SON Velocity in xy plane perp to b 1. m/s vperph
3570 SON Azimuth angle of vel in x-y plane 1.E-02 deg azvpbh
3571 SON Correlation coefficient vxy 1.E-04 ccfvxy
3572 SON Correlation coefficient vxz 1.E-04 ccfvxz
3573 SON Correlation coefficient vyz 1.E-04 ccfvyz
3574 SON Neutral atmosphere model code 1. natmc
3575 SON Correlation coefficient Exy 1.E-04 ccfexy
3576 SON Cross correlation coefficient Uxy 1.E-04 xcfuxy
3577 SON Cross correlation coefficient Une 1.E-04 xcfuen
3578 SON Cross correlatn on Uxy from signeut 1.E-04 xcfxyn
3579 SON Total cross correlation for Uxy 1.E-04 xcfxyt
3580 SON Cross correlatn on Une from signeut 1.E-04 xcfenn
3581 SON Total cross correlatn for Ue and Un 1.E-04 xcfent
3582 SON Horizontal magn neutral wind 1. umerid
3583 SON Alternate error on Uzum (code 1460) 1. duzneu
3584 SON Total error on Uzum (code 1460) 1. duztot
3585 SON Correction term = Ux-Vx 1. uxcor
3586 SON Correction term = Uy-Vy 1. uycor
3587 SON Error on Ux from signeut 1. duxneu
3588 SON Error on Uy from signeut 1. duyneu
3589 SON Total error on Ux 1. duxt
3590 SON Total error on Uy 1. duyt
3591 SON Error on Ue from signeut 1. dueneu
3592 SON Error on Un from signeut 1. dunneu
3593 SON Total error on Ue 1. duet
3594 SON Total error on Un 1. dunt
3595 SON Relative error in neutral atmos 1.E-03 rdna
3596 SON Ion gyro frequency 1. hz fig
3597 SON Azimuth of axis of symmetry 1.E-02 deg axsym
3598 SON Ion-neutral collision freq. coeff. 1.E-12 cm-3/s niuc
3599 SON Direction 4 F Region ion velocity 1. m/s vipef
3600 SON Direction 5 F Region ion velocity 1. m/s vipnf
3601 SON O+O ion-neut coll freq. factor 1.E+02 fopoco
3602 SON log10 (measured ion-neut col freq) 1.E-03 lg(s-1) fmcol
3603 SON Fit 2 log10 (ne in m-3) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nef2l
3604 SON Fit 2 electron temperature, te 1. k tef2
3605 SON Fit 2 ion temperature, ti 1. k tif2
3606 SON Fit 2 temperature ratio, te/ti 1.E-03 trf2
3607 SON Fit 2 ion velocity (pos = away) 1. m/s vof2
3608 SON Fit 2 composition - [o+]/ne 1.E-03 popf2
3609 SON Fit 2 log10(ion-neutral coll. freq) 1.E-03 lg(s-1) colf2l
3610 SON Reduced-chi square of fit 2 1.E-03 chisq2
3611 SON Goodness of fit 2 1. gfit2
3612 SON Usability code fit 2 1. ucf2
3613 SON Fit 3 log10 (ne in m-3) 1.E-03 lg(m-3) nef3l
3614 SON Fit 3 electron temperature, te 1. k tef3
3615 SON Fit 3 ion temperature, ti 1. k tif3
3616 SON Fit 3 temperature ratio, te/ti 1.E-03 trf3
3617 SON Fit 3 ion velocity (pos = away) 1. m/s vof3
3618 SON Fit 3 composition - [o+]/ne 1.E-03 popf3
3619 SON Fit 3 log10(ion-neutral coll. freq) 1.E-03 lg(s-1) colf3l
3620 SON Reduced-chi square of fit 3 1.E-03 chisq3
3621 SON Goodness of fit 3 1. gfit3
3622 SON Usability code fit 3 1. ucf3
3623 SON Zone number for fitted data 1. zonn
3624 SON Fit code of fit 2 1. fitcf2
3625 SON Fit code of fit 3 1. fitcf3
3626 SON Vector Velocity Magnitude (XY plane) 1. m/s magvel
3627 SON CW angle from GM North for 3626-XY 1.E-02 deg nangle
3628 SON E Field Magnitude (XY plane) 1.E-05 V/m magEF
3629 SON CW angle from GM North for 3628-XY 1.E-02 deg eangle
3630 SON parameter 131 1. son131
3631 SON parameter 132 1. son132
3632 SON parameter 133 1. son133
3633 SON parameter 134 1. son134
3634 SON parameter 135 1. son135
3635 SON parameter 136 1. son136
3636 SON parameter 137 1. son137
3637 SON parameter 138 1. son138
3638 SON parameter 139 1. son139
3639 SON parameter 140 1. son140
3640 SON parameter 141 1. son141
3641 SON parameter 142 1. son142
3642 SON parameter 143 1. son143
3643 SON parameter 144 1. son144
3644 SON parameter 145 1. son145
3645 SON parameter 146 1. son146
3646 SON parameter 147 1. son147
3647 SON parameter 148 1. son148
3648 SON parameter 149 1. son149
3649 SON parameter 150 1. son150
3650 SON Thermal red line emission 1.E-02 ph/cm3-s e630t

74
3651 SON Dissoc-Recomb red line emission 1.E-02 ph/cm3-s e630
3652 SON Volume emission of 5200 Angstrom 1.E-02 ph/cm3-s e520
3653 SON parameter 154 1. son154
3654 SON parameter 155 1. son155
3655 SON Electron to ion energy loss rate 1. ev/cm3-s lei
3656 SON Elec. to neutral energy loss rate 1. ev/cm3-s len
3657 SON Energy loss rate (Le = Lei + Len) 1. ev/cm3-s lein
3658 SON Heat conduction 1. ev/cm3-s hc
3659 SON Energy input (=Le-Hc) 1. ev/cm3-s qe
3660 SON Ion to neut energy loss rate (Lin) 1.E+01 ev/cm3-s lin
3661 SON Joule heating (=Lin-Lei) 1.E+01 ev/cm3-s qj
3662 SON Heat flux 1.E+07 ev/cm2-s hflx
3663 SON parameter 164 1. son164
3664 SON parameter 165 1. son165
3665 SON parameter 166 1. son166
3666 SON parameter 167 1. son167
3667 SON parameter 168 1. son168
3668 SON parameter 169 1. son169
3669 SON parameter 170 1. son170
3670 SON 6300 A thermal intensity 1. R ith630
3671 SON 6300 A dissoc-recomb. intensity 1. R idr630
3672 SON 6300 A thermal+diss intensity 1. R itd630
3673 SON 5200 A dissoc-recomb intensity 1. R idr520
3674 SON parameter 175 1. son175
3675 SON parameter 176 1. son176
3676 SON parameter 177 1. son177
3677 SON parameter 178 1. son178
3678 SON parameter 179 1. son179
3679 SON parameter 180 1. son180
3680 SON parameter 181 1. son181
3681 SON parameter 182 1. son182
3682 SON parameter 183 1. son183
3683 SON parameter 184 1. son184
3684 SON parameter 185 1. son185
3685 SON parameter 186 1. son186
3686 SON parameter 187 1. son187
3687 SON parameter 188 1. son188
3688 SON parameter 189 1. son189
3689 SON parameter 190 1. son190
3690 SON parameter 191 1. son191
3691 SON parameter 192 1. son192
3692 SON parameter 193 1. son193
3693 SON parameter 194 1. son194
3694 SON parameter 195 1. son195
3695 SON parameter 196 1. son196
3696 SON parameter 197 1. son197
3697 SON parameter 198 1. son198
3698 SON parameter 199 1. son199
3699 SON parameter 200 1. son200
3700 EIS parameter 1 1. eis01
3701 EIS parameter 2 1. eis02
3702 EIS parameter 3 1. eis03
.
.
.
3799 EIS parameter100 1. eis100

(Autocorrelation Function:)

3800 Scaled real ACF at zero lag 1. acfrs0


3801 Normalized real ACF at lag 1 1.E-04 acfr1
3802 Normalized real ACF at lag 2 1.E-04 acfr2
3803 Normalized real ACF at lag 3 1.E-04 acfr3
.
.
.
3834 Normalized real ACF at lag 34 1.E-04 acfr34
3900 Scale factor for ACF at zero lag 1. acfsf0
3901 Normalized imaginary ACF at lag 1 1.E-04 acfi1
3902 Normalized imaginary ACF at lag 2 1.E-04 acfi2
3903 Normalized imaginary ACF at lag 3 1.E-04 acfi3
.
.
.
3934 Normalized imaginary ACF at lag 34 1.E-04 acfi34

(Non-I.S. Radar Instrument Operation Parameters:)

4001 PKR QC 0=Okay 1. pfqc


4002 PKR QC No records in noise avg 1. pfnnr
4003 PKR QC Avg of Galactic Noise 1. pfgn
4004 PKR QC log10 (noise pwr in spectrm) 1.E-03 lg pfpnl
4005 PKR QC log10 (signl pwr in spectrm) 1.E-03 lg pfpsl
4015 UIL QC log10 (sodium counts) 1.E-03 lg uinacl
4016 UIL QC log10 (F factor) 1.E-03 lg uiffl
4017 UIL QC log10 (Na returns/bkgnd noise) 1.E-03 lg uinfl
4018 UIL QC log10 (av Rayleigh) = NrmlzFctr 1.E-03 lg uiarl
4020 CSL QC Neutral temperature from 1-hr avg 1.E-01 K csltna
4021 CSL QC Full Width at Half Max vert avg 1. m fwhmz
4022 CSL QC Neutral temperature looking E 1.E-01 K csltne
4023 CSL QC Neutral temperature looking N 1.E-01 K csltnn
4025 CFP QC No coefficients 1. cfpnc
4031 GBF QC Skynoise (A/D convertor units) 1. gbskn
4032 GBF QC XCF flag (0=Off, 1=On) 1. gbxcf
4035 GBF QC Groundscatter flag (0:n, 1:y) 1. gbgsct
4050 AFP QC Zenith ref flag (1=use ; 0=no) 1. afpzf
4051 AFP QC Free spectral range(arb p unit) 1.E-01 afpsr
4052 AFP QC Etalon Thickness 1.E-04 m afpet
4053 AFP QC Intensity Calibration Factor 1.E-02 cnt/s-R afpif
4055 AFP QC No Harmonics in Fourier Anal 1. afpnh

75
4056 AFP QC D(Vne)/Dx per 1000 km (x +Ewrd) 1.E-04 m/s-km afdvne
4057 AFP QC D(Vnn)/Dy per 1000 km (y +Nwrd) 1.E-04 m/s-km afdvnn
4058 AFP QC Error in 4056/4057 per 1000 km 1.E-04 m/s-km afddvn
4060 AQF QC Standard deviation in 1411 1.E-01 m/s sd1411
4061 AQF QC # Samples in time avg of 1411 1. nv1411
4062 AQF QC Standard deviation in 1421 1.E-01 m/s sd1421
4063 AQF QC # Samples in time avg of 1421 1. nv1421
4064 AQF QC # Quality flag for a night (1-3) 1. aqfflg
4070 COF QC Mean sampling density for winds 1.E-01 mn-1 coftsw
4071 COF QC Mean sampling density for hts 1.E-01 mn-1 coftsh
4080 STM QC Solar scaling factor 1.E-04 solsf
4090 MUI QC Ion velocity (up from NS dirs) 1. m/s viuns
4091 MUI QC Ion velocity (up from EW dirs) 1. m/s viuew
4092 MUI QC (0-3 <=> ok-bad) 1. muqc1
4093 MUI Ne calibration factor 1. munec
4101 Hecht 4ch Ph. Model no. (eg MSIS90) 1. h4pmn
4102 Hecht 4ch Ph. 1=ok (sza>102;flux;Eo;fo) 1. h4pszf
4103 Hecht 4ch Ph. 1=moon down; 0=moonlit 1. h4pmnf
4104 Hecht 4ch Ph. 1=good night, 0=so-so 1. h4pntf
4111 PKF QC neut horiz wind fit los to az dir 1. m/s pkffhl
4112 PKF QC perp (left) compon. to code 4111 1. m/s pkffpn
4121 IMF 1min S/C B: Bx!Vx IDx IDyz 1. scb
4122 IMF 1min S/C SW: Den!Vx IDx IDyz 1. scsw
4123 IMF 1min S/C Pos: !IMF IDx IDyz 1. scpos
4124 IMF 1min S/C delay: d!Bx IDdel IDmeandel 1. scdel
4131 DVS QC Counting error 1.E-01 K dvsce
4132 DVS Cloud cover (0-3=clr-ovcst;4=snow) 1. dvscl
4133 DVS QC Standard error in the mean 1.E-01 K dvsse
4134 DVS QC Observing time for averages 1. dvstm
4141 KHA observation loc (astronomical name) 1. astloc
4142 KHA beginning hour/min (UT) from log 1. mmdd khabhm
4143 KHA beginning centisec (UT) from log 1.E-02 s khabcs
4144 KHA quality code (1=A, 2=A-, 3=B, ...) 1. khaqc
4145 KHA rel annr emis rate w/o flatfld norm 1.E-01 khare1
4146 KHA rel annr emis rate w/o flatfld norm 1.E-03 khare3
4151 NICT QC 1-h std dev rejection criteria 1.E-01 nictst
4152 NICT QC % threshold acceptance criteria 1.E-02 % nictth
4161 EHP median estim. Electron Hp input 1.E+08 W eepowd
4163 EHP original estim. Total Hp input 1.E+08 W tepow1
4164 EHP original estim. Ion Hp input 1.E+08 W iepow1
4165 EHP original estim. Electron Hp input 1.E+08 W eepow1
4171 RFP median nightly zero los wind 1. m/s rfpmd0
4172 RFP ave hourly zero los wind 1. m/s rfpavh
4173 RFP los wind before zero rm (+away) 1. m/s rfplos

76
List of Ground Based Instruments

This is a list of the predominantly ground-based instrument groups whose data is of interest to the CEDAR
community. The instruments in the tables are arranged in geographic latitude from south to north. Most of the
contact persons are in the CEDAR mailing list which includes e-mail addresses and is available via anonymous
ftp or the cedar www site. Any additions and corrections are welcome, especially for web sites. A KINST
instrument code has been assigned to each instrument in the case that data is submitted to the CEDAR
Database. Most of these are proposed numbers (*) and are not official until there is a data submission. It is
possible that some code groupings are not large enough to allow for future expansion, or that ordering in
geographic latitude is broken with more instruments. Any unique KINST number is sufficient for the Database.
It is only for aesthetics that the numbers are grouped.

The CEDAR Database staff at NCAR is happy to help new data providers organize their data for submission to
the Database. For help and more information contact Barbara Emery (emery@ucar.edu). Instruments are not
obligated to submit data to the CEDAR Database. The purpose of this list is to indicate what kind of data may
be available. Some of the tables from this list are under 'Instrument Classes' at
http://cedarweb.hao.ucar.edu/instruments/cedarplots.html where web page links have been added.

Some ground-based instruments are not included in this list because they provide continuous data coverage
and/or are archived elsewhere. These include ionosondes and polarimeters, which are archived at the World
Data Center A at NOAA/NGDC E/GC2 in Boulder, Colorado, USA (anonymous ftp ftp.ngdc.noaa.gov). U. S.
satellite and rocket data sets are mostly available through NSSDC at NASA (anonymous ftp
nssdca.gsfc.nasa.gov) and NGDC at NOAA. A limited set of balloon and rocket campaigns is listed at the end
of these tables. Riometers are not listed here, but are available from Kile Baker (mailto:kbaker@nsf.gov) who
made a list of these and other instruments for the GEM community.

A. (0001-0099) Inchoherent Scatter Radars (~11)


B. (0800-0999) Coherent ionospheric radars (~24)
C. (1000-2499) Middle atmosphere radars (~101)
D. (2500-2999) Ionosondes with ion drift measurements (~115)
E. (3000-3999) Spectrometers and spectral photometers (~51)
F. (4000-4999) Photometers (~45 imaging and scanning, unknown # of fixed)
G. (5000-5999) Optical Interferometers (~60 Fabry-Perot and ~20 Michelson)
H. (6000-6999) Middle Atmosphere Lidars (~50)
I. (7000-7999) Imagers and all-sky cameras (~118)
J. (8000-8999) Ground magnetometers (~391)
K. (9000-9999) Balloon and rocket campaigns (~2)

A - Incoherent Scatter Radars

Codes 0-99

This is a list of known incoherent scatter radars or receivers arranged generally in geographic latitude. There
are a couple of coherent receivers, also. Those radars which have never sent data to the CEDAR Database are

77
marked with an asterisk (`proposed'). Inclusion in this list does not mean the radar is obligated to send data to
the CEDAR Database or to send all data. Any additions or corrections would be welcome, especially in
location, who to contact, and web site.

Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site


10 Jicamarca, Peru 11.9S 76.0W J. Chau http://jro.igp.gob.pe
11 Paracas, Peru (bistatic with Jicamarca) 13.85S 76.25W J. Chau http://jro.igp.gob.pe
20 Arecibo, Puerto Rico 18.3N 66.8W M. Sulzer http://www.naic.edu/menuimag/atmosfer.htm
25 MU near Shigaraki, Japan 34.8N 136.1E S. Fukao http://www.kurasc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/index-e.html
30 Millstone Hill, USA (any/all antennae) 42.6N 71.5W J. Foster http://www.haystack.edu
31 Millstone Hill UHF Steerable 42.6N 71.5W J. Foster "
32 Millstone Hill UHF Zenith 42.6N 71.5W J. Foster "
33 Millstone Hill L-band Steerable 42.6N 71.5W J. Foster "
35* London, Canada, mobile coherent receiver 42N 81W D. Moorcroft
40 St. Santin, France (any rcvrs, closed) 44.6N 2.2E C. Amory-Mazaudier
41 Nancay, France receiver (closed) 47.4N 2.2E C. Amory-Mazaudier
42 Mende, France receiver (closed) 44.5W 3.4E C. Amory-Mazaudier
43 Monpazier, France receiver (closed) 44.7N 0.8E C. Amory-Mazaudier
45 Kharkov, Ukraine (zenith+steerable) 49.7N 36.3E V. Taran
48* Malvern, England (closed) 52.0N 2.2W P. Williams
50 Chatanika, USA (closed) 65.1N 147.4W J. Kelly
53 ISTP Irkutsk, Russia 52.85N 103.1E G. Zherebtsov/A. Potekhin
68* COSCAT, Oulu, Finland coherent receiver 65N 25E M. Lester
70 EISCAT, Tromsø, Norway, (any rcvrs) 69.6N 19.2E T. van Eyken http:/www.eiscat.uit.no
71 Kiruna, Sweden UHF receiver 67.9N 20.4E T. van Eyken "
72 Tromsø, Norway UHF receiver 69.6N 19.2E T. van Eyken "
73 Sodankylä, Finland UHF receiver 67.4N 26.6E T. van Eyken "
74 EISCAT, Tromø, Norway VHF receiver 69.6N 19.2E T. van Eyken "
80 Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland 67.0N 51.0W J. Kelly http://isr.sri.com
95 EISCAT Svalbard Radar (ESR),Norway 78N 15E T. van Eyken http://www.eiscat.uit.no

B - Coherent Ionospheric Radars

Codes 800-999

This is a list of known coherent ionospheric radars arranged in geographic latitude. The VHF (and sometimes
UHF) radars look in the E region, while the HF radars mostly observe in the F region. Inclusion in this list does
not mean the radar is obligated to send data to the CEDAR Database. Any additions or corrections would be
welcome, especially in location, who to contact, and web site.
Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site

820 HF, Halley, Antarctica 75.52S 26.63W M. Pinnock http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu


825 HF, Sanae, Antarctica 71.68S 2.85W A. D. Walker "
829* VHF, Syowa Station, Antarctica 69.02S 39.56E N. Sato
830 HF, Syowa Station, Antarctica 69.00S 39.58E N. Sato http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu
831 HF, Syowa East, Antarctica 69.01S 39.61E N. Sato "
835 HF, Kerguelen Is 49.35S 70.26E J.-P. Villain "
837* HF, TIGER, Australia 43.38S 147.23E P. Dyson
840 HF, JULIA, Jicamarca, Peru 11.95S 283.13E J. Chau http://jro.igp.gob.pe/julia
841* VHF, San Luis, Brazil 10.3S 67.2W M. Abdu
845 HF Kapuskasing, Canada 49.39N 82.32W R. Greenwald http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu
850* VHF, Red Lake (BARS), Canada 50.9N 93.5W D. McDiarmid
860* VHF, U Saskatoon (SAPPHIRE), CA mobile 52.2N 106.5W J. Koehler/G. Sofko
861 HF, Saskatoon, Canada 52.16N 106.53W G. Sofko http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu
870 HF Goose Bay, Canada 53.32N 60.46W R. Greenwald "
875* VHF, Nipawin (BARS), Canada 53.5N 103.7W D. McDiarmid
880* HF, Prince George, Canada 53.98N 122.59W G. Sofko http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu
885* HF, Shefferville (SHERPA), Canada 54.8N 66.8W C. Hanuise
890* HF, Kodiak Is, Alaska, USA 57.60N 152.2W W. Bristow http://superdarn.jhuapl.edu
895* HF, King Salmon, Alaska, USA 58.68N 156.65W T. Kikuchi "
900 HF, Hankasalmi, Finland 62.32N 26.61E M. Lester "
910 HF, Stokkseyri, Iceland 63.86N 22.02W J.-P. Villain "
911 HF, Pykkvibaer, Iceland 63.86N 19.20W M. Lester "
920* VHF, SABRE, UK and Scandinavia 66.3N 5.8E M. Lester?
930* VHF, STARE, Scandinavia 70N 19E E. Nielsen

78
C - Middle Atmospheric Radars

Codes 1000-1199 MST, 1200-1499 MF/LF, 1500-1999 Meteor, 2000-2499 ST

This is a list of known middle atmospheric radars separated into four groups: MST (mesosphere, stratosphere,
troposphere) VHF radars, MF (medium frequency or partial reflection) and LF (low frequency) radars, meteor
(VHF) radars, and ST (stratosphere, troposphere) radars usually have meteor detection capability. The meteor
detection is usually in the form of a MEDAC (MEteor Detection Accumulation Counter) box. The ST radars
are narrowbeam systems, so MEDACs running on ST radars are a narrowbeam meteor radar system. The 1500-
1999 code series are the all-sky meteor radar systems which are either a) no height ranging, or b) with height
ranging and spatial localization (interferometry). The a) systems can be upgraded to the b) systems. MEDACs
can also run on all-sky systems. Inclusion in this list does not mean the instrument is obligated to send data to
the CEDAR Database. Any additions or corrections would be welcome, especially in location, who to contact,
and web site.
Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site

MST RADARS

1000* Davis, Antarctica (VHF 55MHz) 68.6S 78.0E R. Morris


1020* Jicamarca, Peru 12S 74W J. Chau http://jro.igb.gob.pe
1021* Jicamarca, Peru (Sousy) 12S 74W ?
1030* Tirupati, India (planned) 13N 79E G. Viswanathan
1040 Arecibo MST, Puerto Rico 18.3N 66.75W M. Sulzer http://www.naic.edu/menuimag/atmosfer.htm
1050* Chung-Li, Taiwan 24.9N 121E Y. H. Chu
25 Shigaraki, Japan (MU radar as MST) 34.8N 136.1 E S. Fukao http://www.kurasc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/index-e.html
1080* Urbana, USA 40N 88W S. Franke
1100* Hartz, Germany (Sousy) 52N 10E R. Ruster
1140 Poker Flat, USA (closed) 65N 147W Balsley(<85), Fritts(86)
1160* Kiruna, Sweden (ESRAD) 67.9N 21.1E S. Kirkwood http://www.irf.se/mst/EsrangeMST.html
1170 Andenes, Norway (Sousy) 69N,16E W. Singer
1180 Svalbard, Norway (Sousy) 78N,15E T. van Eyken

MF/LF RADARS

1210 Scott Base, Antarctica 78S 167E G. Fraser/Lawrence


1211* McMurdo, Antarctica 78S 167E D. Fritts
1214 Sjowa, Antarctica 69.02S 39.56E T. Aso
1215 Davis, Antarctica 68.6S 78.0E R. Vincent
1220* Mawson, Antarctica (moved 1993 Davis) 68S 63E R. Vincent
1221 Rothera, Antarctica 67.57S 291.88E D. Fritts
1230* Christchurch, New Zealand 44S 173E G. Fraser
1240 Adelaide, Australia 35S 138E R. Vincent
1245 Rarotonga, Cook Islands 21.5S 160W D. Fritts
1249 Pontianak, Indonesia 0.3S 109.0E R. Vincent
1250 Christmas Island 2N 158W R. Vincent
1254 Tirunelveli, India 8.7N, 77.8E S. Gurubaran
1255* Korhogo, Ivory Coast 9.3N 5.4W A. Kobea
1260* Aguadilla, Puerto Rico 18.4N 67.2W M. Ierkic
1261* U Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico 19N 67W H. Monroy
1270 Kauai, HI, USA 22N 160W D. Fritts
1275 Yamagawa, Japan 31.2N 130.6E CRL
1280 Urbana, IL, USA 40.07N 88W S. Franke
1285 Platteville, USA 40.13N 255.5E A. Manson
1290* Greeley, USA 40.2N 104W G. Adams
1300 Delaware Obs, London, Canada 43N 279E J. MacDougall/W. Hocking
1305* Prague, Czechoslovakia 44-54N 7-24E J. Lastovicka
1310 Wakkanai, Japan 45.4N 141.7E K. Igarashi
1315* Robsart, Canada 49N 109W A. Manson
1317* Kharkov, Ukraine 49.6N 36.3E O. Tyrnov
1320 Collm, Germany (LF) 52N 15E R. Schminder http://www.uni-leipzig.de/~gasse/geo
1330* Irkutsk, Russia (LF) 52N 105E E. Kazimirovsky
1340 Saskatoon, Canada 52N 253E A. Manson
1345* Sylvan Lake, Canada 52N 114W A. Manson
1350 Juliusruh, Germany 54N 13E Hoffmann
1360* Nizhniy Novgorod (Gorky), Russia 55N 44E V. Belikovich
1375 Poker Plat, USA 65N 213E K. Igarashi
1380 Alomar, Norway 69N 16E D. Fritts
1385* Murmansk, Russia 68N 33E V. Vlaskov
1390 Troms&oslash;, Norway 70N 19E T. Hansen

METEOR RADARS

1500 South Pole, Antarctica 90S 0E S. Avery


1518* Davis, Antarctica (VHF diff antenna) 68.6S 78.0E I. Reid
1519* Davis, Antarctica (meteor 33MHz 2004-) 68.6S 78.0E I. Reid
1520* Molodezhnaya, Antarctica (no ht ranging) 67S 46E Y. Portnyagin
1530* Grahamstown, South Africa 33S 27E L. Poole
1535* Jicamarca, Peru 12S 76W J. Chau
1539 Ascension Is 7.95S 14.37W N. Mitchell

79
1540 Jakarta, Indonesia 6S 107E T. Nakamura/H. Wiryosumarto
1545* Trivandrum, India 8N 77E C. Reddi
1560 Atlanta, USA (closed) 34N 84W R. Roper
25 Shigaraki, Japan (MU radar as meteor) 34.8N 136.1 E S. Fukao
1579* Kyoto, Japan 35N 136E T. Tsuda/T. Nakamura
1580 Socorro, NM, USA (mobile, 2001-?) 34.07N 106.92W W. Hocking
1580 Albuquerque, NM, USA (mobile, 98-01) 35.1N 106.3W W. Hocking
1590* Ashkhabad, Turkmenia (no ht ranging) 37N 59E O. Ovezgeldyev
1600* Dushanbe, Tajikistan (no ht ranging) 39N 69E R. Chebotarjov
1605 Platteville, USA 40.13N 255.5E S. Palo
1615* Sofia, Bulgaria 43N 24E D. Pancheva
1616* Bishkek (Frunze), Kyrgyzstan (no ht rg) 43N 73E K. Karimov
1619 London Clovar, Canada 43N 277E W. Hocking
1620 Durham, USA 43.12N 70.94W R. Clark
1660* Bologna, Italy 45N 12E G. Cevolani
1680* Khabarovsk, Russia (no ht ranging) 48N 135E Y. Portnyagin
1700* Volgograd, Russia (no ht ranging) 49N 44E Y. Portnyagin
1710* Kharkov, Ukraine (no ht ranging) 50N 36E B. Kashcheyev
1730 Sheffield, UK 53N 2W N. Mitchell
1740* Kuhlungsborn, Germany (no ht ranging) 54N 12E K. Greisiger
1750 Obninsk, Russia (no ht ranging) 55N 37E Y. Portnyagin
1760 Kazan, Russia (no ht ranging) 56N 49E A. Fahrutdinova
1770* Aberdeen, UK 57N 2W H. Muller
1775 Esrange, Sweden 68N 21E N. Mitchell
1780 Dixon Is, Russia (ht ranging in 8/01) 72N 80E Y. Portnyagin
1785 Resolute Bay, Canada 75N 265E W. Hocking
1787* Svalbard, Norway 78N 16E NIPR
1790* Heiss Island, Russia (no ht ranging) 81N 58E Y. Portnyagin

ST RADARS WITH METEOR CAPABILITY

2030* Buckland Park, Australia 35S 138E R. Vincent


2040* Darwin, Australia (under const.) 12S 130E K. Gage
2070* Piura, Peru (under const.) 5S 80W B. Balsley, S. Avery
2080* Biak, Indonesia (planned) 1S 123E K. Gage, B. Balsley
2090 Christmas Island (w. meteor) 2N 157W S. Avery
2100* Pohnpei, Caroline Is (under const.) 7N 158E K. Gage, B. Balsley
2110* Saipan, Mariana Is (under const.) 15N 145E K. Gage
2120* Arecibo, Puerto Rico 18N 67W J. Cho
2140* Kennedy Space Center (50 MHz), USA 28.3N 80.5W S. Smith
2150* White Sands (50 MHz), USA 32.8N 106.4W J. Hires
2160* Tsukuba (MRI, 404 MHz), Japan 35??N 165E?? Nagai
2170* Monterey (NPS, 404 MHz), USA 36.5N 121.9W W. Shaw
2180* Sunset, USA (closed) 39N 105W J. Green
2190* Flatland, USA 40.07N 88W J. Green
2200 Platteville (50 MHz), USA (w. meteor) 40.13N 104.5W S. Avery
2210* Platteville (405 MHz), USA 40.13N 104.5W D. Strauch
2220* Dugway (404 Mhz), USA 40.2N 112.9W C. Biltoff
2230* Ft Collins (CSU, 404 MHz), USA 40.6N 105W J. Cox
2240* Penn State, USA 41N 78W D. Thompson
2250* Millstone Hill, USA 42.6N 71.5W J. Salah
2260* LSEET, Toulon, France (mobile) 43.1N 5E M. Cochet
2270* PROUST, France 45N 2E M. Glass
2300* Poker Flat, USA (planned) 65N 147W D. Fritts
2320 Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland 67N 51W S. Avery

D - Ionosondes with Ion Drift Measurements

Codes 2500-2999

This is a list of known digital ionosonde instruments capable of making assumed ion drift measurements
arranged in geographic latitude. The electron density data may be available through the World Data Center A
in Boulder at http://spidr.ngdc.noaa.gov or through the contact person. There are various types of inosondes that
can estimate the ion drifts including Dynasondes, Canadian Digital Ionosondes (CADI), and Digisondes. The
digisonde list is maintained at the University of Massachusetts in Lowell at http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm . Data
is available through the web-sites for most of the dynasondes and digisondes. Inclusion in this list does not
mean an obligation to send ion drift data to the CEDAR Database. Any additions or corrections would be
welcome, especially in location, who to contact, and web site.
Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site
2510* Halley Bay, Antarctica (dynasonde) 75.5S 333.3E M. Jarvis
2520* Zhong-Shan, Antarctica 69.2S 76.2E Ruiyuan Liu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2522* Davis, Antarctica (from Casey in 2002) 68.6S 78.0E R. Morris http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2525* Casey, Antarctica (CADI after 2002) 66.3S 110.5E P. Wilkinson http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2540* Port Stanley, Falkland Is 51.6S 302.1E J. Smith http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2550* Puerto Madryn, Argentina 42.7S 294.7E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2559* Bundoora, Australia 37.72S 145.05E P. Dyson http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html

80
2560* Beveridge, Australia (deactivated) 37.3S 145.0E P. Dyson http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2565* Adelaide, Australia 34.7S 138.6E S. Scott http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2570* Grahamstown, South Africa 33.3S 25.6E L. A. McKinnell http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2580* Alexander Bay (gone?) 28.6S 16.5E A. Poole
2581* Louisvale, South Africa 28.51S 21.24E L. A. McKinnell http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2582* Ajana, Australia 27.9S 114.7E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2583* Laverton, Australia 27S 123.5E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2584* Tucuman, Argentina (DISS) 26.9S 294.6E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2585* Tucuman, Argentina (gone?) 26.8S 65.3W T. Bullett
2586* Pretoria, South Africa (gone?) 26.1S 28.1E D. C. Baker
2588* Agua Verde, Chile (DPS-4, campaigns) 25.4S 290.0E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2589* Agua Verde, Chile (DGS-256, gone?) 25.4S 290.0E T. Bullett
2592* Boolathana, Australia 24.6S 113.6E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2594* Pietersburg, South Africa (gone?) 24.0S 29.5E D. Baker
2596* Alice Springs, Australia 24.0S 133.8E B. Ward http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2598* Longreach, Australia 23.4S 143.8E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2600* Cachoeira Paulista, Brazil (gone?) 23.2S 314.2E M. Abdu
2601* Cachoeira Paulista, Brazil 22.7S 315.0E M. Abdu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2604* Madimbu, South Africa 22.38S 30.88E L. A. McKinnell http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2605* Learmonth, Australia (VIS) 22.2S 114.1E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2606* Learmonth, Australia (DISS) 21.8S 114.0E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2609* Campo Grande, Brazil 20.5S 305.3E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2610* South Hedland, Australia 20.4S 118.6E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2612* Lynd River, Australia 18.0S 144.9E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2614* Curtin RAAF Base, Australia 17.6S 123.8E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2615* Elliott, Australia 17.6S 133.5E B. Ward http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2618* Kalkaringi, Australia 17.4S 130.8E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2620* Derby, Australia (moved) 17.3S 123.6E B. Ward http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2622* Wyndham W.A., Australia 15.4S 128.1E B. Ward http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2624* Groote Eylandt, Australia 13.9S 136.4E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2626* Scherger RAAF Base, Australia 12.7S 142.1E S. Wood http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2628* Darwin, Australia 12.5S 130.9E B. Ward http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2630* Jicamarca, Peru 12.0S 283.2E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2632* Cachimbo, Brazil 9.5S 305.2 M. Abdu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2634* Ascension Island (DGS-256) 8.0S 346.E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2635* Ascension Island (DPS-4, campaigns) 7.95S 14.37E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2638* Fortaleza, Brazil 3.8S 322.0E M. Abdu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2639* San Marco, Kenya 2.9S 40.2E U Roma http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2640* Sao Luis, Brazil 2.5S 315.8E M. Abdu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2645* Pontianak, Indonesia 0.3S 109.0E B. Hidayat http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2650* Boa Vista, Brazil (COPEX campaign) 2.8N 299.3E M. Abdu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2665* Hainan Is, China (deactivated 1998) 18.3N 109.3E J. Shi http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2666* Hainan, China 19.4N 109.0E J. Shi http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2670* Ramey, Puerto Rico 18.5N 292.9E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2680* Karachi, Pakistan 25.0N 67.1E B. Ghuri http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2685* Chung-Li, Taiwan 25.0N 121.2E J.-Y. Liu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2690* Okinawa, Japan (DPS-1) 26.3N 127.8E K. Igarashi http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2691* Okinawa, Japan (DPS-4) 26.3N 127.8E K. Igarashi http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2700* Eglin AFB, FL 30.4N 273.2E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2705* Wuhan, China 30.6N 114.4E Wan Weixing http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2710* Bermuda, UK 32.4N 295.3E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2715* Dyess AFB, TX 32.5N 260.3E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2720* Islamabad, Pakistan 33.8N 72.9E B. Ghuri http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2725* Point Arguello, CA 34.7N 239.4E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2730* Kirtland AFB, NM (deactivated 1992) 35.1N 253.4E ? http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2735* Xinxiang, China (moved) 35.3N 113.9E M. Wu http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2740* Kokubunji, Japan 35.7N 139.5E K. Igarashi http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2744* Osan AB, Korea 37.1N 127.0E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2745* El Arenosillo, Spain 37.1N 353.3E B. de la Morena http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2750* Anyang, S. Korea 37.39N 126.95E Y.-S. Pyo http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2755* Wallops Island, VA 37.9N 284.5E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2760* Athens, Greece (DGS-128, deactivated) 38.0N 23.6E ? http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2761* Athens, Greece (DPS-4) 38.0N 23.5E A. Belehaki http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2765* Sacramento, CA, USA (gone?) 38.5N 238.5E ?
2770* Beijing, China (DGS-256, SID35) 39.9N 116.5E H. Xiong http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2771* Beijing, China (DGS-256, SID39, moved) 39.9N 116.5E ? http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2774* Boulder, CO, USA 40.0N 254.7E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2775* Kunson, N. Korea (gone?) 40.3N 128.7E ?
2780* San Vito, Italy 40.6N 17.8E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2785* Roquetas/Tortosa, Spain 40.8N 0.3E L. F. Alberca http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2790* Rome, Italy (DPS-4) 41.9N 12.5E B. Zolesi http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2791* Rome, Italy (DGS-256, deactivated) 41.9N 12.5E B. Zolesi http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2793* Hanscom AFB (DPS-4, SID242 moved) 42.6N 288.5E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2794* Hanscom AFB (DGS-256) 42.6N 288.5E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2796* Millstone Hill, MA (DPS-1) 42.6N 288.5E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2797* Millstone Hill, MA (DGS-256) 42.6N 288.5E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2800* Bear Lake, UT (dynasonde) 42.9N 248.6E F. T. Berkey http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/IONO/Dynasonde
2805* Argentia, Canada 47.3N 306.0E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2810* Munich, Germany (moved) 48.0N 12.0E ? http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2811* CORIS, France ? C. Dannion http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2814* Pruhonice, Czech Republic 50.0N 14.6E J. Boska http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2815* Dourbes, Belgium 50.1N 4.6E J. C. Jodogne http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2820* Chilton, UK (DPS-1) 51.5N 359.4E J. Smith http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2821* Slough, UK (DGS-256) 51.5N 359.4E J. Smith http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2822* Fairford, UK 51.7N 358.5E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2823* Irkutsk, Russia 52.4N 104.3E K. Ratovsky http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2825* Goose Bay, Canada 53.3N 299.7E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2830* Juliusruh, Germany 54.6N 13.4E W. Singer http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2840* Gillam, Canada (CADI) 56.4N 94.37W J. MacDougall
2850* Rabbit Lake, Canada (CADI) 58.0N 103.7W J. MacDougall
2855* King Salmon, AK 58.7N 203.4E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2865* Lerwick, UK 60.1N 358.8E J. Smith http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2870* Narssarssuaq, Greenland 61.2N 314.6E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2871* Yakutsk, Russia 62.0N 129.6E A. E. Stapanov http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2872* HAARP, Gakona AK 62.24N 214.91E T. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2880* Lycksele, Sweden (dynasonde) 64.60N 18.90E C. Juren http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/IONO/Dynasonde
2882* College, AK 64.9N 212.2E Tt. Bullett http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2884* Zhigansk, Russia 66.8N 123.4E A. E. Stapanov http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2890 Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (DISS,deac) 67.0N 309.3E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html

81
2891* Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (LP-DISS) 67.0N 309.3E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2900* Cambridge Bay, Canada (CADI) 69.1N 105.1W J. MacDougall
2904* Norilsk, Russia 69.4N 88.1E K. Ratovsky http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2905* Tromsø, Norway (dynasonde) 69.6N 19.2E M. T. Rietveld http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/IONO/Dynasonde
2906* Tromsø;, Norway 69.9N 19.2E P. Cannon http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2920* Resolute Bay, Canada (CADI) 74.75N 95.0W J. MacDougall
2930 Qaanaaq, Greenland 77.5N 290.6E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2940* Ny Alesund, Svalbard, Norway (moved) 78.9N 11.9E B. Reinisch http://ulcar.uml.edu/slist.htm or SAO-X/SAO-X.html
2950* Eureka, Canada (CADI) 80.0N 85.9W J. MacDougall
2970* Alert, Canada (CADI) 82.4N 62.3W J. MacDougall

E - Spectrometers and Spectral Photometers

Codes 3000-3999

This is a list of known spectrometers and spectral photometers arranged in latitude. Where a mobile instrument
has remained in a particular place for some period of time, that location and the years it was there are indicated
below the home institution of the instrument. The word `imaging' means spatial imaging unless noted
otherwise. Inclusion in this list does not mean the instrument is obligated to send data to the CEDAR data base.
This list also serves as a pointer to data. Any additions or corrections would be welcome, especially in
additional instruments, location, who to contact, and web site.
Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site
3000 South Pole, Antarctica (Ebert-Fastie) 90S 0E G. Sivjee
3001 South Pole, Antarctica (CCD) 90S 0E G. Sivjee
3010 Davis, Antarctica 68.58S 77.97E G. Burns
3011* Davis, Antarctica (BOMEM) 68.58S 77.97E G. Burns
3012* Dumont d'Urville, Antarctica 66.4S 140E Pommereau
3040 Adelaide, Australia 35S 138E G. Sivjee
3050* Cachoeira Paulista, Brazil (imaging photometer) 22.4S 45.0W J.-H. Sobral
3070* Arecibo, Puerto Rico 18.3N 66.8W C. Tepley
3090 Daytona Beach, FL, USA (mobile ERAU) 29.1N 81.0W G. Sivjee
3110* McDonald Obs, TX (spatial/spectral imaging) 30.7N 104.0W D. Torr
3111* McDonald Obs, TX (spectral imaging, mobile) 30.7N 104.0W D. Torr
3120* U Arizona, AZ (imaging, mobile) 32.15N 110.57W L. Broadfoot
3130* U Texas, Dallas, TX (imaging photometer, mobile) 32.55N 96W R. Rohrbaugh
3130* Haleakala, USA (81-85, Jul-Aug 86-present) (21N 156E) R. Rohrbaugh
3130* McDonald Obs, TX (86-present) (30.7N 104W) R. Rohrbaugh
3140* Berkeley, CA 37.53N 122.17W S. Chakrabarti
3160* NOAA Boulder, CO 40.02N 105.16W G. Mount
3170-2* Abastumani Astro Obs, Tbilisi, Georgia (start 1957) 41.8N 42.8E G. Didebulidze
3180* Bear Lake, UT 42.9N 248.6E P. Espy
3181* Bear Lake, UT (mobile) 42.9N 248.6E P. Espy
3200* U Michigan, MI (mobile) 42.18N 83.4W J.-H. Yee
3201* U Michigan, MI (photometer) 42.18N 83.4W P. Hays
3220* AFGL, MA (5ch imaging) 42.45N 71W R. Viereck
3240* U Western Ontario 42.6N 81.2W R. Lowe
3250* Haute Provence Obs, France 44N 6E Pommereau
3260* Nat'l Res Council, Canada (mobile, rocket support) 45.25N 75.4W F. Creutzberg
3280* Rattlesnake Mt, WA (intermittent use) 46.4N 119.6W D. Slater
3300* Calgary, Canada 51.0N 114.0W L. Cogger
3320 Wuppertal, Germany 51.3N 7.2E J. Oberheide
3340* Saskatoon, Canada 52.1N 106.4W D. McEwen
3360* Stockholm, Sweden 59.5N 18.2E P. Espy
3361* Stockholm, Sweden (1m, scanning) 59.5N 18.2E J. Stegman
3380* Oslo, Norway (1/4m f/4) 59.56N 10E H. Myrabo
3400-3* Poker Flat, AK 1-4 65N 147W C. Deehr
3420 Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland 67.0N 51W G. Sivjee
3421* Sondrestromfjord, Greenland (Imaging Spectrometer) 67.0N 51W G. Swenson
3422* Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (NRC instr) 67.0N 51W R. Niciejewski
3423* Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland 67.0N 51W Pommereau
3430* Sodankylä, Finland 67.4N 26.6E Pommereau
3440* Skibotn, Norway (1/2m f/4) 69.2N 20.2E O. Harang
3460* Andoya, Norway 69.3N 16E R. Gernt
3480* Thule AFB, Greenland 76.4N 68.3W R. Niciejewski
3500 Longyearbyen, Svalbard 1 78.1N 15.4E G. Sivjee
3501-3* Longyearbyen 1-2, Svalbard 2-4 78.1N 15.4E C. Deehr
3520 Eureka, Canada 79.6N 86W G. Sivjee

82
F - Photometers
Codes 4000-4299 Sky mapping, 4300-4599 Scanning, 4600-4999 Fixed

This is a preliminary list of known photometers arranged in latitude. The instruments are divided into three
groups: sky mapping or imaging photometers (4000-4299), meridian scanning or multiple channel photometers
(4300-4599), and fixed single channel photometers (4600-4999). Some of these data may be in the form of
images. Spectral photometers are included in the list for spectrometers (3000-3999). The list for fixed
photometers is deliberately sketchy, since one or more are available at most optical sites. The ones that are
listed are those that are not at well-known sites. Many fixed photometers are used to calibrate Fabry-Perot
interferometers or spectrometers, but some have long time records. If an experimentor wishes to submit fixed
photometer data to the CEDAR Database, a KINST number between 4600 and 4999 can be assigned, where the
numbers assigned would be in order of submission. Inclusion in this list does not mean the instrument is
obligated to send data to the CEDAR data base. Any additions or corrections would be welcome, especially in
additional instruments, location, who to contact, and web site.
Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site

SKY MAPPING PHOTOMETERS

4040* Arequipa, Peru 16.5S 71.5W M. Biondi


4055* Shigaraki, Japan 34.9N 136.1E Nagoya U/INPE
4060* Kiso, Japan 35.8N 137.6E Niigata U
4070* Boulder, USA (MASP, 12/77-present) 40.1N 105.2W D. Slater
4080* U Pittsburg, USA (mobile) 41.2N 75.4W M. Biondi
4090* Albany, USA (MASP, 6/78-10/80) 42.6N 74.0W D. Slater
4095* Rikubetsu, Japan 43.5N 143.8E Nagoya U
4100* Iron Mountain, USA (MASP, 6/77-present) 46.1N 88.1W D. Slater
4110* Richland, USA (MASP, 1/76-present) 46.4N 119.6W D. Slater
4120* Seeley Lake, USA (MASP, 8/83-present) 47.1N 113.3W D. Slater
4130* Hinsdale, USA (MASP, 1/76-9/81) 48.6N 107.1W D. Slater
4140* Eureka, USA (MASP, 9/80-8/83) 48.9N 115.1W D. Slater
4150* Calgary, Canada (MASP, 10/85-10/87) 50.9N 114.3W D. Slater
4160* Calgary, Canada 51.0N 114.0W L. Cogger
4170* Calgary, Canada (MASP, 10/87-present) 51.2N 114.2W D. Slater
4180* Leduc, Canada (MASP, 9/78-12/84) 53.2N 113.3W D. Slater
4190* Fort Providence, Canada (MASP, 3/79-9/81) 61.3N 117.6W D. Slater

SCANNING OR MULTIPLE CHANNEL PHOTOMETERS

4305* Zhongshan, Antarctica 69.4S 76.4E R. Liu


4310* Mawson, Antarctica (6 channel) 67.2S 62.9E P. Greet
4320* Adelaide, Australia (6 channel) 35S 138E I. Reid
4330* Kolhapur, India 16.8N 74.2E G. Mukherjee
4335 AAO, Tbilisi, Georgia (6 channel,scan, 1957-?) 41.8N 42.8E G. Didebulidze
4340* Stewart Radiance Lab, USA (mobile) 42.6N 71.5W R. Huppi
4350* Delaware Obs, Canada 43N 169W R. Lowe
4360* Haute Provence Obs, France 44N 5E R. Lowe
4370* Pinawa, Canada (CANOPUS) 50.2N 96.0W F. Creutzberg
4380* Swan River, Canada (IMS, 76-78) 52.1N 101W R. Gattinger
4390* Rabbit Lake, Canada 53.1N 107W D. McEwen
4400* La Ronge, Canada (IMS, 76-78) 55.07N 105W R. Gattinger
4410* Thompson, Canada (IMS, 76-78) 55.4N 97.5W R. Gattinger
4420* Gillam, Canada (CANOPUS) 56.4N 94.6W F. Creutzberg
4430* Churchill, Canada (IMS, 76-78) 58.45N 94W R. Gattinger
4440* Stockholm, Sweden 59N 18E G. Witt/J. Stegman
4450* Ft Smith, Canada (CANOPUS) 60.0N 111.9W F. Creutzberg
4460* Rankin Inlet, Canada (CANOPUS) 62.8N 92.1W F. Creutzberg
4470 Poker Flat, USA (4 channel) 65N 147W J. Hecht http://gedds.pfrr.alaska.edu/aerospace/pokerflatdata
4471* Poker Flat, USA (5 channel) 65N 147W N. Brown
4473 Ft Yukon, AK, USA (4 channel) 66.6N 214.7E J. Hecht http://gedds.pfrr.alaska.edu/aerospace/fortyukondata
4476 Sondrestromfjord, Greenland (5 channel) 67.0N 51W G. Swenson
4480* Kiruna, Sweden (4 channel) 67.9N 20.4E A. Steen
4490* Tromsø;, Norway (4 channel) 69.6N 19.2E K. Henriksen
4500* Hornsund, Svalbard (4 channel, mobile) 77N 16E A. Egeland
4510* Longyearbyen, Svalbard (5 channel) 78.1N 15.4E C. Deehr
4520* Ny-Alesund, Svalbard (4 channel, mobile) 78.6N 12E A. Egeland
4530* Eureka, Canada 79.6N 86W R. Lowe

FIXED SINGLE CHANNEL PHOTOMETERS

* A81, Antarctica (SESAME) (planned 1996) 81.5S 3.0E J. Dudeney


* A80, Antarctica (SESAME) (planned 1995) 80.7S 20.4W J. Dudeney
* A78, Antarctica (SESAME) (planned 1997) 78.0S 3.0E J. Dudeney
* A77, Antarctica (SESAME) (deployed 1992) 77.5S 23.4W J. Dudeney
* Halley, Antarctica 75.5S 26.6W J. Dudeney
* Syowa, Antarctica #1-? 69.0S 39E ?
* Kolhapur, India 16.8N 74.2E G. K. Mukherjee
* Abastumani Astro Obs, Tbilisi, Georgia (1942-?) 41.8N 42.8E G. Didebulidze
* Stewart Radiance Lab, USA (mobile) 42.6N 71.5W R. Huppi
* Whitworth College, USA #1-3 (8,2,1 ch, mobile) 47.4N 117W L. Kieffaber

83
G - Optical Interferometers

Codes 5000-5699 Fabry-Perot, 5700-5999 Michelson

This is a list of known Fabry-Perot and Michelson interferometers arranged in latitude. Fabry-Perots run from
5000-5699 and Michelsons from 5700-5999. The Michelsons capable of making wind measurements are
indicated. Where mobile instruments have made measurements for some period of time, the location and
year(s) they were there are sometimes indicated. Inclusion in this list does not mean the instrument is obligated
to send data to the CEDAR data base. Any additions or corrections would be welcome, especially in location,
who to contact, and web site.

Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site

FABRY-PEROT INTERFEROMETERS

5000 South Pole, Antarctica (1989-present) 90S 0E G. Hernandez, R. Smith


5015 Arrival Heights, Antarctica (2002-present) 77.83S 166.66E G. Hernandez
5020 Halley, Antarctica (1988-present) 75.5S 26.6W R. Crickmore
5025* Syowa, Antarctica 69S 39E NIPR
5030* Davis, Antarctica (1993-2003) 68.58S 77.97E P. Dyson
5031* Davis, Antarctica (2003-present) 68.58S 77.97E P. Dyson
5040* Mawson, Antarctica (shut in 2002) 67S 63W P. Dyson
5060 Mt John, New Zealand (1991-present) 43.98S 170.42E G. Hernandez
5070* Beveridge, Australia 37S 145E P. Dyson
5080* Adelaide, Australia 35S 138E I. Reid/I. Bruce
5030* Mt Torrens, Australia (moved to Davis 1993) 31S 138E P. Dyson
5120* Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil 23S 46W J.-H. Sobral
5140 Arequipa, Peru (1983-present) 16.5S 71.5W J. Meriwether
5142* Jicamarca, Peru (1968) 11.45S 76.87W G. Hernandez
5150* Kolhapur, India 16.8N 74.2E G. K. Mukherjee
5160 Arecibo, Puerto Rico (1972-present) 18N 67W C. Tepley http://www.naic.edu/menuimag/atmosfer.htm
5180* Haleakala, USA (planned) 21N 156E G. Hernandez, R. Smith
5190 Kitt Peak, USA (H alpha, 1997-present) 31.98N 111.60W S. Nossal
5200* Aerospace Corp, USA (mobile) 34N 118W J. Hecht
5210* Shigaraki, Japan 34.9N 136.1E Nagoya U
5220* Mt Zao, Japan 38.1N 140.5E H. Kamiyama
5240* Fritz Peak, USA (1969-1985) 39.86N 105.52W G. Hernandez
5260* Laurel Ridge, USA (closed 6/99) 40.1N 79.2W M. Biondi
5270* U Pittsburgh, USA (mobile) 41.2N 75.4W M. Biondi
5270* in Natal, Brazil (82) (5S 35W) M. Biondi
5270* in Kwajalein, Marshall Is (77-80) (9N 168E) M. Biondi
5280* Bear Lake, USA 41.9N 111.4W V. Wickwar
5290* Boston U, USA (under const., mobile) 42.20N 71.0W R. Kerr
5292* Ann Arbor, USA (1986-1987) 42.29N 83.71W G. Hernandez
5300 Peach Mountain, USA (1989-present, intermit) 42.40N 83.96W R. Niciejewski
5320* Albany, USA 42.4N 73.5W J. Kim
5323* Bedford, MA, USA (1966-1967) 42.45N 71.27W G. Hernandez
5340 Millstone Hill, USA (from Pitts., 1986-present) 42.6N 71.5W D. Sipler http://www.haystack.edu
5360* Madison, USA (H alpha) 43.0N 89.2W F. Roesler
5380-1* Toronto, Canada #1-2 43.4N 79.2W R. Wiens
5390* Rattlesnake Mt, USA (planned) 46.4N 119.6W G. Hernandez
5400* Calgary, Canada 51.0N 114.0W L. Cogger/G. Garbe
5410* Saskatoon, Canada 52.1N 106.4W A. Manson/D. McEwen
5420* Zvenigorod, Russia 55.4N 36.5E Y. Truttae
5430 Watson Lake, Canada (1991-1993) 60.1N 128.6W R. Niciejewski
5440* Yakutsk, Russia 62.1N 129.5W V. Ignatiev
5445 Eagle, AK, USA 64.78N 218.84E CRL
5459* Fairbanks, USA (1980-1986) 64.80N 148.10W G. Hernandez
5460 College, USA (1981-1986) 65N 147W R. Smith
5461* College, USA (scanning) 65N 147W M. Conde
5463* Poker Flat, USA (1987-present) 65.12N 147.43W G. Hernandez/R. Smith
5464 Poker Flat, USA 65.12N 147.43W CRL
5465 Poker Flat, AK, USA (ASI, 1994-present) 64.1N 212.5E D. Lummerzheim http://thing.pfrr.alaska.edu/conde
5480 Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (1983-present) 67.0N 51W R. Niciejewski
5500-1* Kiruna, Sweden 67.9N 20.4E A. Aruliah/D. Rees
5510 Inuvik, Canada (vertical, 2000-present) 68.25N 226.70E D. Lummerzheim http://gedds.pfrr.alaska.edu/inuvik_FPS/default.htm
5515* Kilpisjarvi, Finland 69N 22E A. Aruliah
5520* Skibotn, Norway 69.2N 20.2E R. Smith
5535 Resolute Bay, Canada 74.73N 94.89W Q. Wu
5540 Thule AFB, Greenland (1984-present, intermit) 76.4N 68.3W R. Niciejewski
5560-2* Longyearbyen, Svalbard 78.1N 15.4E R. Smith/A. Aruliah/D. Rees
5580* Ny-Alesund, Svalbard 78.6N 12E A. Aruliah
5590* Eureka, Canada (planned) 79.6N 86W ?

MICHELSON INTERFEROMETERS

5700 South Pole, Antarctica 90S 0E G. Sivjee


5710* Davis, Antarctica (BOMEM, ~2001-) 68.58S 77.97E G. Burns/J. French
5720 Daytona Beach, FL, USA (mobile ERAU) 29.1N 81.0W G. Sivjee
5730 Socorro, NM, USA (U IL 2001-?) 34.07N 106.92W G. Swenson
5730 Albuquerque, NM, USA (U IL 1998-2001) 35.1N 106.3W G. Swenson

84
5730 U Illinois, USA (mobile, NM) 40.07N 88.1W G. Swenson
5741* Bear Lake, USA #1 41.4N 111.5W D. Baker
5742* Bear Lake, USA #2 41.4N 111.5W P. Espy
5750* U Michigan, USA (mobile) 42.18N 83.4W R. Niciejewski
5760-1* Stewart Radiance Lab, USA #1-2 42.6N 71.5W R. Huppi
5781-2* Delaware Obs, Canada #1-3 (2 mobile) 42.6N 81.2W R. Lowe
5800* North York/ISTS, Canada (mobile, winds) 43.4N 79.2W R. Wiens
5820* Service d'Aeronomie, France (mobile, winds) 48.5N 2.2E G. Thuillier
5860 Stockholm, Sweden 59.5N 18.2E P. Espy
5820* in Sodankylä;, Finland (88-89) 67.4N 26.6E G. Thuillier
5900 Sondrestromfjord, Greenland 67.0N 51W G. Sivjee
5950 Resolute Bay, Canada 74.75N 95.0W G. Sivjee
5960 Longyearbyen, Svalbard 78.1N 15.4E G. Sivjee
5980 Eureka, Canada 79.6N 86W G. Sivjee

H - Lidar Instruments
Codes 6000-6999

This is a preliminary list of known middle atmosphere lidars arranged in latitude, some of which are closed
down. There are Rayleigh, aerosol (Rayleigh with good height and time resolution), resonance (Na, Ca, Fe,
Ca+, Sr+), differential absorption (or ozone), Doppler, and Raman lidars. Rayleigh and aerosol lidars overlap
somewhat. Lidars that only look at the troposphere are not considered in this list. Inclusion in this list does not
mean the instrument is obligated to send data to the CEDAR Database. Exclusion is an oversight and we
would be interested in including additional instruments and in correcting any errors, especially in location, who
to contact, and web site. A list of all current lidars is maintained by ICLAS (International Coordination-group
on Laser Atmospheric Studies) at HamptonUniversity at http://iclas.hamptonu.edu.
Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site
6000* South Pole, Antarctica (aerosol) 90S 0E Fiocco
6001* South Pole, Antarctica (Rayleigh) 90S 0E Papen/Gardner
6020* Syowa, Antarctica (sodium) 69S 39E NIPR
6021* Syowa, Antarctica (Rayleigh) 69S 39E A. Nomura
6025* Davis, Antarctica (Rayleigh) 68S 78E A. Klekociuk
6030* Rothera, Antarctica (Fe/Rayleigh) 67.57S 68.13W P. Espy
6040* Dumond d'Urville, Antarctica (aerosol) 66.4S 140E S. Godin
6100* Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil (resonance) 23S 46W B. R. Clemesha
6120* Reunion Island (Rayleigh) 21S 56E Keckhut/Hauchecorne
6190* Gadanki, India (Rayleigh-Mie) since May ‘98 13.5N 79.2E M. Krishnaiah
6200* Kingston, Jamaica (Rayleigh) 18.0N 76.8W Kent/Keenliside
6210* Arecibo, Puerto Rico (Doppler/Rayleigh) 18.3N 66.8W C. Tepley
6215* Mauna Loa (Rayleigh) 20N 156W McDermid/LeBlanc
6216* Haleakala (Rayleigh) 21N 156W T. Kane
6240* Fukuoka, Japan (Rayleigh) 33.39N 138E T. Shabata
6250* Georgia Tech, USA (Rayleigh) 33.45N 84.2W G. Gram
6255* Table Mountain, USA (Rayleigh) 34N 118W LeBlanc/McDermid
6260* Shigaraki, Japan (Rayleigh/Raman) 34.9N 136.1E Kyoto U
6261* Shigaraki, Japan (sodium) 34.9N 136.1E Shinshu U
6262* Table Mt, USA (ozone) 34N 118W I. McDermad
6265* Hachioji, Japan (Na resonance, temperature) 35.6N 139.4E TMU
6270* NASA Langley, USA (Rayleigh) 37.0N 76.2W P. McCormick
6280* U Maryland, USA (Rayleigh, mobile) 39.0N 77.0W T. Wilkerson
6290* Wright Patterson AFB, USA (Doppler) 39.4N 84.1W J. Meriwether
6300 U Illinois, USA (Rayleigh/sodium, mobile) 40.07N 88.1W C. Gardner http://conrad.csl.uiuc.edu
6310* U Michigan, USA (Doppler) 40.18N 83.7W P. Hays
6320 Colorado State U, USA (Rayleigh/sodium) 40.59N 105.14W C-Y She http://lamar.colostate.edu/~lidar/
6330 Utah State U, USA (Rayleigh) 41.74N 111.81W V. Wickwar
6340* AFGL, USA (Rayleigh, fixed) 42.45N 71.27W J. Meriwether
6341* AFGL, USA (Rayleigh, mobile) 42.45N 71W J. Meriwether
6342* AFGL, USA (sodium) 42.45N 71W J. Meriwether
6350* Purple Crow, Canada (Rayleigh/Na/Raman) 42.9N 81.4W R. Sica http://pcl.physics.uwo.ca/pclhtml/mainpage.html
6360* Institute Space & Terr Sci, Canada (Rayleigh) 43.4N 79.2W A. Carswell
6370* Haute Provence Obs, France (Rayleigh) 44N 6E Keckhut/Hauchecorne
6371* Haute Provence Obs, France (resonance) 44N 6E C. Granier
6372* Haute Provence Obs, France (ozone) 44N 6E G. Megie
6373* Haute Provence Obs, France (Doppler?) 44N 6E A. Granier
6380* Biscarosse, France (Rayleigh) 44.24N 1.1W M. Chanin
6390* Hohenpeissenberg, Germany (ozone, mobile) 47N 11E Wege
6400* Brest, France (Rayleigh, on ship) 48.2N 4.3W M. Chanin
6420* U College Wales, UK (Rayleigh) 52.4N 4.1W Whiteway/Konguem
6440 Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (Na/Rayleigh) 67.0N 51.0W J. Thayer
6450* Poker Flat, AK, USA (Rayleigh) 67.1N 147.4W Collins/Mizutani
6451* Poker Flat, AK, USA (resonance) 67.1N 147.4W Collins
6470* ALOMAR (Andoya), Norway (Na, end 1993) 69.3N 16.0E U. Von Zahn
6471* ALOMAR (Rayleigh/Mie/Raman) 69.3N 16.0E U. Von Zahn
6472* ALOMAR (Andoya), Norway (sodium) 69.3N 16.0E C.-Y. She
6510* Thule AFB, Greenland (aerosol, under const.) 76.4N 68.3W Fiocco
6520* Ny-Alesund, Svalbard (ozone) 78.9N 11.9E Fabian/Neuber
6530* Eureka, Canada 79.6N 86W A, Carswell

85
I - Imagers and All-Sky Cameras

Codes 7000-7999

This is a preliminary list of known imagers and all-sky cameras arranged in latitude. Some imagers look at
broadband and narrowband intensities, other narrowbandimagers can find the temperature. These are listed as
Tn. Sky mapping photometers are located in the photometer group (4000-4299) and imaging spectral
photometers in the spectrometer group (3000-3999). Inclusion in this list does not mean the instrument is
obligated to send data to the CEDAR data base. Much of these data are in the form of pictures which would be
accessible via the contact person. Any additions and corrections would be welcome, especially in additional
instruments, location, who to contact, and web site.

Code Instrument Location Contact Person Web Site


7000* South Pole, Antarctica 90S 0E S. Mende
7001* South Pole, Antarctica 90S 0E NIPR
7009* P2 (PENGUIn), Antarctica 85.67S 46.38W S. Mende
7010* P1 (PENGUIn), Antarctica 83.86S 129.61E S. Mende
7011* P3 (PENGUIn), Antarctica (planned 94) 82.8S 47.5E S. Mende
7012* P4 (PENGUIn), Antarctica 82.01S 96.76E S. Mende
7013* A81 (SESAME), Antarctica (planned) 81.5S 3.0E J. Dudeney
7014* A80 (SESAME), Antarctica (planned) 80.7S 20.4W J. Dudeney
7015* A78 (SESAME), Antarctica (planned) 78.0S 3.0E J. Dudeney
7016* A77 (SESAME), Antarctica (planned) 77.5S 23.4W J. Dudeney
7017* P5 (PENGUIn), Antarctica (planned 95) 75.7S 89.2E S. Mende
7018* Halley (SESAME), Antarctica (planned) 75.5S 26.6W J. Dudeney
7019* P6 (PENGUIn), Antarctica (planned 95) 74.1S 128.8E S. Mende
7020* P2' (PENGUIn), Antarctica (planned 96?) 69.5S 98.8E S. Mende
7025* Syowa, Antarctica 69S 39E NIPR
7030* Davis, Antarctica 68.58S 77.97E R. Morris
7040* Mawson, Antarctica 67.6S 62.9E R. Morris
7050* Dumond d'Urville, Antarctica 66.4S 140E G. Thuillier
7055* Casey, Antarctica 66.2S 110.4E R. Morris
7060* Maquarie Island (1960-1988, 1992-) 54.5S 159.0E R. Morris
7070* La Trobe U, Australia 37S 145E P. Dyson
7074* Cachoeira Paulista, Brazil 22.4S 45.0W J.-H. Sobral
7076* Arequipa, Peru 16.5S 71.5W M. Mendillo
7080* Tanjungsari, Indonesia 6.9S 107.9E Kyoto U
7085* Kolhapur, India 16.8N 74.2E G. K. Mukherjee
7160-1* Arecibo, PR (NRL mobiles for heating exp) 18.3N 66.8W P. Bernhardt
7090* Bombay, India (under const.) 18.6N 72.4E G. K. Mukherjee
7092* Wake Island 19.28N 166.6E M. Mendillo
7191 Kauai, HI, USA (Tn USU mobile) 20.75N 156.24W M. Taylor
7095* Sata, Japan 31.0N 130.7E Nagoya U
7100* Aerospace Corp, USA (mobile) 34N 118W J. Hecht
7180 Socorro, NM, USA (mobile, U IL, 2001-?) 34.07N 106.92W G. Swenson
7105* Misato, Japan 34.1N 135.4E Kyoto U
7110* Shigaraki, Japan 34.9N 136.1E Nagoya U
7111-8* Nagoya U, Japan #1-8? (mobile) 35.1N 136.5E T. Oguti
7180 Albuquerque, NM, USA (mobile, U IL, 98-01) 35.1N 106.3W G. Swenson
7121-?* Los Alamos, USA #1-? (mobile) 35.5N 106W J. Wolcott
7130* Kiso, Japan 35.8N 137.6E Niigata U
7140-1* Lockheed, USA #1-2 (mobile) 37.3N 122.1W S. Mende
7150 Berkeley, CA, USA (mobile, CO) 37.8N 122.3W S. Mende
7155* Zao, Japan 38.1N 140.5E Tohoku U
7160-1* Naval Res Lab, USA #1-2 (mobile) 38.6N 77W P. Bernhardt
7150 Glade Park, CO, USA (mobile Berkeley) 39.0N 108.7W S. Mende
7171-?* NASA Goddard, USA #1-? (mobile, barium) 39.0N 77W M. Miller
7180 U Illinois, USA (mobile, NM) 40.07N 88.1W G. Swenson
7185 Platteville, CO , USA 40.13N 104.5W B. Williams http://www.cora.nwra.com/~biff/Platteville/platteville.html
7188 Abastumani Ast Obs Tbilisi, Georgia (Tn 02-?) 41.8N 42.8E G. Didebulidze
7190 Bear Lake, USA (USU mobile, HI, BR, CO) 41.9N 111.4W M. Taylor
7191 Bear Lake (Tn USU mobl,UT,CO,NM,HI) 41.9N 111.4W M. Taylor
7192* Bear Lake, USA (formerly Southampton) 41.9N 111.4W M. Taylor
7193 Bear Lake, USA (Tn USU mobile#2, CO) 41.9N 111.4W M. Taylor
7200* Boston U, USA (mobile) 42.2N 71.0W M. Mendillo http://www.bu.edu/csp/imaging_science
7200* at Millstone Hill, USA (87-89) (42.6N 71.5W) M. Mendillo
7220-4* Geophys Lab, USA #1-5 (1 mobile) 42.45N 71W T. Pedersen
7240* Millstone Hill, USA (89-present) 42.6N 71.5W M. Mendillo http://www.bu.edu/csp/imaging_science
7260* North York/ISTS, Canada (mobile) 43.4N 79.2W ?
7262* Rikubetsu, Japan 43.5N 143.8E Nagoya U
7280* Nat'l Res Council, Canada (mobile) 45.2N 75W R. Gattinger
7300* Rattlesnake Mt, USA 46.4N 119.6W D. Slater
7320-5* Whitworth College, USA #1-6 (mobile) 47.4N 117W A. Peterson
7340-?* Max Planck Garching, Germany #1-6? (mobile)
7350* Southampton, UK (now at Bear Lake) 50.7N 1.5W M. Taylor
7360-1* Calgary, Canada #1-2 (mobile,) 51.0N 114.0W Cogger/Garbe
7380* U College London, UK (mobile) 51.3N 0.1W D. Rees
7400* Rabbit Lake, Canada 53.1N 107.5W D. McEwen
7420* Gillam, Canada 56.4N 94.6W L. Cogger
7440* Oslo, Norway (mobile) 59.56N 10E A. Egeland
7460-73* Poker Flat, USA #1-14 (mobile) 65N 147W Nielsen/Hallinan
7480 Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland 67.0N 51.0W R. Doe http://isr.sri.com/instruments/allsky

86
7481* Sondrestromfjord, Greenland (4-ch, 20FOV) 67.0N 51.0W J. Semeter
7500-1* Kiruna, Sweden #1-2 67.9N 20.4E A. Steen
7520* Andoya, Norway 69.3N 16E A. Gundersen
7540* Tromsø, Norway 69.6N 19.2E P. Rothwell
7560* Resolute Bay, Nunavut, Canada 74.73N 94.9W B. Jackel
7570* Thule AFB, Greenland 76.4N 68.3W R. Niciejewski
7580* Qaanaaq, Greenland 77.5N 69.2W K. Fukui
7590* Longyearbyen, Svalbard 78.1N 15.4E T. Hallinan
7591* Longyearbyen, Svalbard (moved Ny Alesund) 78.2N 15.4E K. Fukui
7600* Ny Alesund, Svalbard 78.9N 12.0E K. Fukui
7610* Eureka, Canada 79.6N 86W D. McEwen
7620* Nord, Greenland 81.6N 16.7W K. Fukui

J - Ground Magnetometers

Codes 8000-8999

This is a list of known magnetometers arranged in geographic latitude. Inclusion in this list does not mean the
magnetometer is obligated to send data to the CEDAR Database. Indeed, many of these magnetometers
routinely submit their data to the World Data Center A or other public sites. Other magnetometers may be
research magnetometers, or may keep most of their data in analog form. This list is included to aid in
submitting magnetometer data to the CEDAR Database for campaign studies. In particular, data used in various
AMIE runs may be submitted to the Database, with the permission of the magnetometer staff where needed, for
other researchers to use . KINST codes are not explicitly given yet.

Instrument Location Instrument Location

SPA South Pole 90.00S 0.00E PTK St. Paratunka 52.94N 158.25E
PP2 (PENGUIn) 85.67S 313.62E NGK Niemegk 52.07N 12.68E
PP1 (PENGUIn) 83.86S 129.61E PKS Saskatoon 52.10N 253.6E
AP3 (AGO/PENGUIn) 82.76S 28.58E IRT Irkutsk 52.17N 104.45E
PP4 (PENGUIn) 82.01S 96.76E PKS Parksite 52.2N 252.8E
A81 (SESAME) A81 (1996) 81.5S 3.0E PET Petropavlovsk 52.90N 158.40E
A80 (SESAME) A80 (1995) 80.7S 20.4E GSB Goose Bay 53.3N 299.6E
A78 (SESAME) A78 (1997) 78.0S 3.0E MOH Mohe 53.5N 122.4E
VOS Vostok 78.45S 106.87E WNG Wingst 53.74N 9.07E
BLG Belgrano 77.87S 325.38E ISL Island Lake 53.86N 265.34E
SBA Scott Base 77.85S 166.78E YOR York 53.95N 358.95E
MCM McMurdo 77.85S 166.70E TPS The Pas 54.0N 258.9E
A77 (SESAME) A77 (1992) 77.52S 336.57E MNK Minsk 54.50N 27.88E
AP5 (AGO/PENGUIn) 77.23S 123.51E HLP Hel 54.61N 18.82E
P5 (PENGUIn) 75.7S 89.2E MEA Meanook 54.62N 246.67E
HBA Halley Bay 75.52S 333.32E NVS Novosibirsk 55.03N 82.90E
TNB Terra Nova Bay 74.69S 164.12E GWC Great Whale R. 55.27N 282.22E
P6(PENGUIn) 74.1S 128.8E PDB Poste-de-la-Baleine 55.27N 282.22E
ASU Asuka 71.15S 24.13E ESK Eskdalemuir 55.32N 356.80E
PP6 (PENGUIn) 71.07S 127.87E MOS Moscow 55.48N 37.31E
NVL Novolazarevskaya 70.77S 11.83E BFE Brorfelde 55.63N 11.67E
MZH Mizuho 70.43S 40.20E RSV Rude Skov 55.84N 12.46E
SNA SANAE 70.33S 357.51E GIM Gillam 56.38N 265.36E
LZV Lazarev 69.97S 12.70E ARS Arti (SVD>~1960) 56.43N 58.57E
PIO Pionerskaya 69.73S 95.50E FMC Fort McMurray 56.66N 248.79E
LEN Leningradskaya 69.50S 159.40E SVD Sverdlovsk (<~1960) 56.73N 61.07E
ZHS Zhongshan 69.4S 76.4E LYN Lynn Lake 56.85N 258.93E
SYO Syowa Station 69.01S 39.59E SIT Sitka 57.07N 224.67E
DVS Davis 68.58S 77.97E GML Glenmore 57.16N 356.32E
MOL Molodezhnaya 67.67S 45.85E BKC Back 57.72N 265.83E
MAW Mawson 67.61S 62.88E BOX Borok 58.03N 38.97E
DRV Dumont d'Urville 66.67S 140.01E RAL Rabbit Lake 58.22N 256.32E
MIR Mirny 66.55S 93.02E FCC Fort Churchill 58.76N 265.92E
CSY Casey 66.20S 110.35E FTN Fort Nelson 58.82N 237.26E
AIA Argentine Island 65.25S 295.74E LOV Lovo 59.35N 17.83E
CCH Chicheng 62.2S 301.0E KVI Kvistaberg 59.50N 17.63E
MCQ MacQuarie Island 54.50S 158.95E UPS Uppsala 59.90N 17.35E
KGL Port-aux-Francais 49.35S 70.20E LNN Leningrad 59.95N 30.71E
PAF Port-aux-Francais 49.35S 70.20E FSM Fort Smith 60.02N 248.05E
MRN Marion Island 46.88S 37.85E WTL Watson Lake 60.06N 231.42E
CZT Port Alfred 46.43S 51.87E MGD Magadan 60.12N 151.02E
EYR Eyrewell 43.42S 172.35E LER Lerwick 60.13N 358.82E
AMS Martin de Vivies 37.83S 77.57E NUR Nurmijarvi 60.51N 24.66E
CNB Canberra 35.32S 149.36E WHS Whitehorse 60.7N 224.9E
CAN Canberra 35.32S 149.36E EKP Eskimo Point 61.11N 265.95E
ADL Adelaide 34.67S 138.65E NAQ Narsarsuaq 61.18N 314.57E
HER Hermanus 34.43S 19.23E AMU Anchorage 61.24N 210.13E
KAT Katanning 33.68S 117.59E POD P. Tunguska 61.60N 90.00E
GNA Gnangara 31.78S 115.95E FSP Fort Simpson 61.76N 238.77E
DLB Dalby 27.18S 151.2E FHB Frederikshaab 62.00N 310.32E
BRV Birdsville 25.83S 139.33E FAR Faroes 62.05N 352.98E
HBK Hartebeesthoek 25.88S 27.71E YAK Yakutsk 62.08N 129.67E
ASP Alice Springs 23.77S 133.88E GAK Gakona 62.12N 214.86E

87
LRM Learmonth 22.22S 114.10E HAN Hankasalmi 62.30N 26.65E
CTA Charters Towers 20.08S 146.25E TLK Talkeetna 62.30N 209.90E
TSU Tsumeb 19.22S 17.70E YKC Yellowknife 62.43N 245.50E
TAN Tananarive 18.92S 47.55E RIT Rankin Inlet 62.82N 267.89E
TAH Tahiti 17.56S 210.39E IQA Iqaluit 63.45N 291.70E
PPT Pamatai (Tahiti) 17.56S 210.39E FRB Frobisher Bay 63.7N 291.5E
ASA American Samoa 14.28S 170.70E CHC Coral Harbor 64.0N 276.8E
WEP Weipa 12.68S 141.88E DAW Dawson 64.05N 220.89E
API Apia 13.81S 188.23E CDC Cape Dorset 64.1N 283.4E
DRW Darwin 12.40S 130.90E GHB Godthaab 64.17N 308.27E
PMG Port Moresby 9.41S 147.15E LRV Leirvogur 64.18N 338.30E
WTK Watukosek 7.56S 112.63 BLC Baker Lake 64.33N 263.97E
EUS Eusebio 3.89S 321.56E NOR Nordli 64.37N 13.36E
WWK Wewak 3.55S 143.62E HUS Husafell 64.47N 338.97E
BIK Biak 1.08S 136.05E OUJ Oulujarvi 64.52N 27.23E
PTN Pontianak 0.05S 109.25E ARK Arkhangelsk 64.60N 40.50E
KOU Kourou 2.21N 307.27E LYC Lycksele 64.61N 18.75E
BNG Bangui 4.33N 18.57E CMO College 64.87N 212.17E
LAM Lamto 6.23N 5.02W NOW Norman Wells 64.90N 234.50E
TIE Tiebissou 7.22N 5.24W RVK Rorvik 64.94N 10.98E
KOR Koror 7.33N 134.5E OUL Oulu 65.10N 25.85E
KAT Katiola 8.20N 5.04W PKR Poker Flat 65.11N 212.54E
AAE Addis Ababa 9.03N 38.77E SKT Sukkertoppen 65.42N 307.10E
YAP Yap 9.3N 138.5E AMK Ammassalik 65.60N 322.37E
KOR Korhogo 9.34N 5.43W CNL Contwoyto Lake 65.75N 248.75E
NIE Nielle 10.20N 5.64W ISA Isafjordur 66.08N 336.82E
SIK Sikasso 11.34N 5.70W PGC Pangnirtung 66.1N 294.6E
KOU Koutiala 12.36N 5.45W CWE Cape Wellen 66.17N 190.17E
SAN San 13.24N 4.88W TJO Tjornes 66.20N 342.80E
GUA Guam Is 13.58N 144.87E RPB Repulse Bay 66.5N 273.9E
MUT Muntinlupa 14.37N 121.02E FYU Fort Yukon 66.57N 214.70E
MBO M Bour (or HDZ) 14.39N 343.04E FYK Fort Yukon (Kirk) 66.57N 214.70E
MOP Mopti 14.50N 4.08W ZGN Zhigansk 66.75N 123.26E
BAG Baguio 16.40N 120.60E ZYK Zyryanka 66.75N 150.78E
TOM Tombouctou 16.73N 3.00W YSL Yar Sale 66.80N 70.80E
SJG San Juan 18.12N 293.85E KTZ Kotzebue 66.88N 197.4E
SNY Sanya 18.2N 109.5E BET Bettles 66.90N 208.44E
ABG Alibag 18.64N 72.87E PEL Pello 66.90N 24.08E
QNZ Qungzhong 19.0N 109.8E STF Sondre Stromfjord 67.02N 309.28E
WKE Wake Island 19.20N 166.70E MAR Martti 67.47N 28.28E
PHU Phuthuy 21.03N 105.95E SOD Sodankyl&auml; 67.37N 26.63E
HON Honolulu 21.32N 202.00E KIR Kiruna 67.83N 20.42E
MAK Makaha 21.50N 201.70E LOZ Lovozero 67.90N 35.02E
TAM Tamanrasset 22.79N 5.53E ATU Attu 67.93N 306.43E
GZH Guangzhou 23.1N 113.3E MUO Muonio 68.01N 23.53E
QZH Qunzhou 24.9N 118.6E AVI Arctic Village 68.13N 213.43E
LNP Lunping 25.00N 121.17E INK Inuvik 68.25N 226.70E
CBI Chichijima 27.15N 142.3E MMK Murmansk 68.25N 33.08E
SHY Shaoyang 27.2N 111.5E ABK Abisko 68.36N 18.82E
MDY Midway Island 28.21N 182.62E PBC Pelly Bay 68.4N 270.5E
GUI Guimar-Tenerife 28.32N 343.57E GHC Gjoa Haven 68.5N 264.2E
DLR Del Rio 29.94N 259.08E CKA C. Kamenny 68.50N 73.60E
BSL Bay St. Louis 30.40N 270.60E CPS Cape Schmidt 68.92N 180.52E
WHN Wuhan 30.5N 114.6E KAU Kautokeino 69.02N 23.05E
ZOS Shanghai 31.1N 121.2E KIL Kilpisjarvi 69.05N 20.70E
YMK YMK 31.2N 130.62 CBB Cambridge Bay 69.10N 255.00E
KNY Kanoya 31.42N 130.88E GDH Godhavn 69.25N 306.47E
KAG Kagoshima 31.48N 130.72E IGC Igloolik 69.3N 278.2E
TUC Tucson 32.25N 249.17E NLK Norilsk 69.40N 88.10E
HTY Hatizyo 33.13N 139.80E MAS Masi 69.46N 23.70E
TUL Tulsa 35.91N 264.21E TAL Taloyoak 69.54N 226.45E
KAK Kakioka 36.23N 140.18E TRO Troms&oslash; 69.66N 18.94E
ALM Almeria 36.85N 357.54E KEV Kevo 69.76N 27.01E
FRN Fresno 37.09N 240.28E YSH Yugorskiy Shar 69.80N 60.80E
ASH Ashkhabad 37.95N 58.11E AMD Amderma 69.82N 60.77E
FRD Fredericksburg 38.21N 282.63E ALT Alta 69.86N 22.96E
ONW Onagawa 38.43N 141.47E SYH Seyakha 70.10N 72.50E
PTA Point Arena 39.0N 236.3E KVK Kaktovik 70.13N 216.35E
DLN Dalian 39.1N 21.5E CPY Cape Parry 70.17N 235.28E
SPT San Pablo-Toledo 39.55N 355.65E CYC Clyde River 70.4N 291.4E
TKN Tuckerton 39.62N 283.67E SCO Scoresbysund 70.48N 338.03E
TOL Toledo 39.88N 355.95E SOR Soroya 70.54N 22.22E
BJI Beijing 40.06N 116.18E CHD Chokurdakh 70.62N 149.89E
BOU Boulder 40.13N 254.77E UMQ Umanaq 70.68N 307.87E
BMT Beijing Ming Tombs 40.30N 116.20E JAN Jan Mayen 70.9N 351.3E
EBR Ebro 40.80N 0.50E KHR Kharasavey 71.10N 66.80E
ISK Istanbul 41.07N 29.06E BRW Barrow 71.30N 203.25E
TKT Tashkent 41.33N 69.62E MCP MAGIC P 71.5N 313.72E
GRH Green Hill 41.4N 88.3E TAM Tambey 71.50N 71.80E
TFS Tbilisi 42.09N 44.71E TIK Tixie Bay 71.58N 128.92E
SUB Sudbury 42.20N 288.70E SKA Skarsvag 71.11 25.83E
AQU L Aquila 42.38N 13.32E MCW MAGIC West 72.00N 317.41E
PPI Popov Island 42.98N 131.73E SAH Sachs Harbour 72.00N 235.00E
MCL Mt Clemens 42.60N 277.10E MKM M. Karmakuly 72.30N 52.50E
AAA Alma Ata 43.25N 76.92E SKG Sopochnaya 72.50N 81.60E
VLA Vladivostok 43.68N 132.17E MCE MAGIC East 72.57N 326.10E
MMB Memambetsu 43.91N 144.19E MCG MAGIC GISP 72.57N 326.55E
CDS Camp Douglas 44.00N 269.70E UPN Upernavik 72.78N 303.85E
CNH Changchun 44.1N 25.2E MCN MAGIC North 72.93N 322.38E
RPC Rapid City 44.20N 256.90E BEY Beliy Island 73.30N 70.00E
MSR Moshiri 44.37N 142.27E DIK Dixon Island 73.54N 80.56E
SUA Surlari 45.32N 26.25E DNB Daneborg 74.22N 339.93E
OTT Ottawa 45.40N 284.55E BJN Bear Island 74.50N 19.20E
ODE Odessa 46.78N 30.88E KUV Kullorsuaq 74.57N 302.82E
THY Tihany 46.90N 17.89E PRB Preobrazhenya 74.67N 112.56E
YSS Yuzhno Sakhalins 46.95N 142.72E RBC Resolute Bay 74.70N 265.10E
STJ St Johns 47.60N 307.32E IZV Izvestija 75.87N 83.08E
NCK Nagycenk 47.63N 16.72E KTN Kotelny 75.94N 137.71E
CLF Chambon-la-Foret 48.02N 2.26E KOT Kotelny 76.00N 137.80E
FUR Furstenfeldbruck 48.17N 11.28E SVS Savissivik 76.02N 294.90E

88
NEW Newport 48.26N 242.88E MBC Mould Bay 76.20N 240.60E
EBR Ebre 48.50N 0.50E HOP Hopen Island 76.51N 24.01E
VIC Victoria 48.52N 236.58E DMH Danmarkshavn 76.77N 341.37E
BDV Budkov 49.10N 14.00E HOR Hornsund 77.00N 15.60E
HRP Hornepayen 49.2N 275.3E ZHE C. Zhelanija 77.00N 68.60E
GLL Glenlea 49.60N 262.90E THL Thule 77.48N 290.83E
MZL Manzhouli 49.6N 117.4E UDN Uedinenija 77.52N 82.22E
KGD Karaganda 49.82N 73.08E CCS Cape Chelyuskin 77.72N 104.27E
LVV Lvov 49.90N 23.80E LYR Longyearbyen 78.20N 15.82E
PIN Pinawa 50.20N 263.96E NAL Ny Alesund 78.92N 11.95E
MAB Manhay 50.3N 5.7E VIZ Vize 79.48N 76.98E
KIV Kiev 50.72N 30.30E ERK Eureka 80.0N 274.1E
LCL Lucky Lake 51.0N 252.9E HIS Heiss Island 80.62N 58.05E
HAD Hartland 51.06N 355.52E NRD Nord 81.60N 343.33E
BEL Belsk 51.84N 20.79E ALE Alert 82.50N 297.50E
VAL Valentia 51.93N 349.75E

K - Balloon and Rocket Campaigns

Codes 9000-9999

The following is a list of common balloon and rocket launching sites arranged in latitude. Balloons collect data
between approximately 20 and 40 km, while rockets can get data between 20 and 1500 km depending on how
they are deployed.

Site Location Balloon/Rocket


Kerguelen Is, Antarctica 49.3S 69.3E rocket
Woomera, Australia 31.1S 136.5E rocket
Thumba, India ? rocket
Palestine, USA 32.1N 95.3W balloon
White Sands, USA 32.2N 106W rocket
Wallops Is, USA 38N 75W rocket
Aire Sur L'Adour, France 43.4N 0W balloon
Gap, France 44.3N 6W balloon
South Uist, UK 57N 7W rocket
Churchill, Canada 58.45N 94W rocket
Poker Flat, USA 65N 147W rocket
Kiruna, Sweden 67.9N 20.4E balloon/rocket
Andoya, Norway 69.3N 16.0E balloon/rocket
Heiss Island, Russia 81N 58E rocket

The following is a preliminary list of known balloon or rocket campaigns that have data of interest to the
CEDAR community. They are arranged in the order in which we become aware of them. Inclusion in this list
does not mean the balloon or rocket instruments are obligated to send data to the CEDAR data base. Any
additions or corrections would be welcome, especially in additional campaigns of interest, location and who to
contact.
Code Instrument Approx. Loc. Contact Person
9000-2* S. Pole (balloon, Dec 85-Jan 86) 90S 0E E. Bering
9000* U Houston X-ray detector J. Benbrook
9001* U Maryland X-ray detector D. Matthews
9002* Electric fields E. Bering
9020* Ozone hole Canadian (balloon) W. Evans

89
Combined Daily Listing for IS and HF Radars
The following listing summarizes CEDAR Database holdings for incoherent scatter radars and for HF radars.
These are:

JRO= Jicamarca, Peru


ARO= Arecibo, Puerto Rico
MUI= Middle and Upper atmosphere radar (MU), Japan
STS= Saint Santin, France
MLH= Millstone Hill, MA, USA
KKV= Kharkov, Ukraine
IST= Irkutsk, Russia
EIS= EISCAT, Tromsø, Norway
SON= Sondrestrom, Greenland
CHT= Chatanika, AK, USA
ESR= EISCAT Svalbard Radar, Norway
HHF= Halley, Antarctica
SAN= SANAE, Antarctica
SYF= Syowa, Antarctica
SYE= Syowa-East, Antarctica
KGF= Kerguelen Island
KHF= Kapuskasing, Canada
SHF= Saskatoon, Canada
GBF= Goose Bay, Canada
FHF= Hankasalmi, Finland
WHF= Stokkseyri, Iceland
EHF= Pykkvibaer, Iceland

The daily Ap is given as well. Each line contains as many as seven days. An entry of N, T, and/or V in the
following table signifies that at least one data point is available during that UT day. Proxy F-region ion drifts
from the 150-km echoes from the JULIA coherent radar at Jicamarca are shown by an entry of J. An entry of F
implies that there are Fabry-Perot data available in the CEDAR Database on that day (or month, in the case of
Arequipa) as well. Similarly, an entry of D implies the presence of Digisonde ion drift data in the CEDAR
Database on that day also. The significance of the symbols is as follows:

N - data related to electron density


T - data related to temperatures
V - data related to velocities
J - JULIA proxy ion drifts (V) from 150-km echoes
F - ancillary Fabry-Perot data
D - ancillary Digisonde ion drift data
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
66 Jan 25-26 NTV 11 14

66 Mar 1- 2 NTV 3 3
66 Mar 29-30 NTV 12 6

66 Apr 13-15 NTV 15 8 4


66 Apr 27 NTV 1

66 Jun 2- 3 NTV 10 7
66 Jun 16-17 NTV 6 4

90
66 Jun 30 NTV 6

66 Jul 1 NTV 5
66 Jul 14-15 NT 4 8

66 Aug 9-10 NT 9 12
66 Aug 19-20 NT 20 7

66 Sep 2- 3 NT 15 92
66 Sep 16-17 NT 10 9
66 Sep 20-21 NTV 21 10

66 Oct 1- 2 NT 6 3
66 Oct 6- 7 NTV 22 8

66 Nov 3- 4 NTV 17 9
66 Nov 11-16 NT 6 8 7 2 4 4
66 Nov 17-18 NTV 11 12
66 Nov 22-24 NTV 3 2 6
66 Nov 30 NT 28

66 Dec 1- 2 NT 17 6
66 Dec 7 NT 4
66 Dec 9 NT 3
66 Dec 11 NTV 3
66 Dec 12 NT NTV 2
66 Dec 13-15 NT 20 48 18
66 Dec 16 NT NTV 8
66 Dec 17 NT 9
66 Dec 19-23 NT 3 7 12 14 8
66 Dec 30-31 NTV 6 3

67 Jan 2- 7 NT 7 10 2 3 6 28
67 Jan 10-11 NT NTV 4 16
67 Jan 12-15 NT 2 26 61 9
67 Jan 16 NT NTV 9
67 Jan 17-18 NT 4 5
67 Jan 19-25 NT 5 13 9 4 5 2 5

67 Feb 1- 2 NT 4 2
67 Feb 3- 4 NT 2 11
67 Feb 8 NT 46
67 Feb 9-10 NT NTV 82
67 Feb 11 NT 11
67 Feb 16 NT 64
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
67 Feb 17 NT NT 15
67 Feb 18 NT 5
67 Feb 21-22 NT NT 6 7
67 Feb 23 NT 14
67 Feb 24-25 NT NTV 4 15
67 Feb 27-28 NT 5 4

67 Mar 1 NT 5
67 Mar 3- 4 NT 8 6
67 Mar 6- 7 NT 8 5
67 Mar 11-13 NTV 2 2 5
67 Mar 22-24 NT 4 4 3
67 Mar 27 NT 18
67 Mar 29 NT 6
67 Mar 30-31 NT NTV 11 3

67 Apr 1 NTV 18
67 Apr 5 NT NT 11
67 Apr 6 NT 12
67 Apr 8- 9 NTV 5 5
67 Apr 12-17 NT 4 2 3 4 10 10
67 Apr 20-22 NT 7 7 18
67 Apr 24 NTV 29
67 Apr 25 NT NT NTV 8
67 Apr 26 NT NT 3
67 Apr 27-28 NT 3 3

67 May 1- 3 NT 14 25 87
67 May 8- 9 NTV 5 5
67 May 12 NT 13
67 May 16 NT 6
67 May 17-18 NT 11 7
67 May 23 NTV 9
67 May 24 NT NTV 11
67 May 25-31 NT 130 146 20 55 45 42 43

67 Jun 1- 2 NT 4 9
67 Jun 6- 7 NTV 46 22
67 Jun 8- 9 NT 15 14
67 Jun 12 NT 5
67 Jun 16 NT NT 6
67 Jun 17-18 NT 9 4
67 Jun 22-25 NT 5 4 4 24
67 Jun 27 NT NTV 19
67 Jun 28 NTV 10

67 Jul 1- 3 NTV 17 7 4
67 Jul 6- 7 NT 8 12
67 Jul 12-13 NT 8 7
67 Jul 17 NT 4
67 Jul 18-19 NT NTV 7 4
67 Jul 20-21 NT 5 5
67 Jul 25-26 NT 11 6
67 Jul 31 NT 2

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
67 Aug 1 NTV 4
67 Aug 2 NT NTV 2
67 Aug 3 NT 3

91
67 Aug 8 NT 11
67 Aug 10-11 NT NT 13 24
67 Aug 12 NT 8
67 Aug 14 NT 10
67 Aug 15-16 NT NTV 6 8
67 Aug 17-18 NT 19 14
67 Aug 23 NT 5
67 Aug 28 NT 6
67 Aug 29-30 NT NTV 8 10
67 Aug 31 NT 11

67 Sep 1- 2 NT 25 18
67 Sep 5- 6 NT 4 4
67 Sep 7- 8 NT NT 9 9
67 Sep 12-13 NT NTV 4 29
67 Sep 26-27 NTV 4 5

67 Oct 10-11 NT NTV 33 13


67 Oct 12 NT NT 19
67 Oct 13 NT 9
67 Oct 24-27 NT 4 3 3 10
67 Oct 28-30 NT NTV 25 25 15

67 Nov 3 NT 23
67 Nov 8- 9 NTV 18 10
67 Nov 10-11 NT 4 17
67 Nov 16-17 NT 9 2
67 Nov 20 NT 2
67 Nov 22 NT 13
67 Nov 23 NT NT 8
67 Nov 24-25 NT 20 11
67 Nov 28 NT 17
67 Nov 29-30 NT NTV 14 13

67 Dec 1 NTV 33
67 Dec 6- 7 NT NTV 21 20
67 Dec 12-14 NT 6 5 4
67 Dec 18 NT 19
67 Dec 19-20 NT NTV 30 32
67 Dec 21 NT 16
67 Dec 26-27 NT 7 9
67 Dec 29 NT 6

68 Jan 2- 3 NT NTV 35 9
68 Jan 4 NT 7
68 Jan 16-17 NT NTV 13 13
68 Jan 18 NT 10
68 Jan 23-24 NT 10 10
68 Jan 29 NT 16
68 Jan 31 NTV 8

68 Feb 1 NTV 10
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
68 Feb 22-23 NT 10 5
68 Feb 27 NT 8
68 Feb 28 NT NTV 30
68 Feb 29 NTV 18

68 Mar 1 NTV 10
68 Mar 13-14 NT 5 23
68 Mar 16 NTV 26
68 Mar 17 NT NTV 12
68 Mar 26 NT 14
68 Mar 27 NT NTV 16
68 Mar 28-29 NTV 12 14

68 Apr 2- 4 NT 12 13 9
68 Apr 9-10 NTV 2 6
68 Apr 12-13 NT 11 23
68 Apr 22 NTV 8
68 Apr 23-24 NT NTV 12 8
68 Apr 25-26 NT 5 26
68 Apr 30 NT 7

68 May 1- 2 NT 13 14
68 May 7- 8 NTV 53 7
68 May 15-18 NT 9 11 15 17
68 May 28-29 NT 6 9

68 Jun 5- 6 NT 5 5
68 Jun 11 NT NTV 103
68 Jun 12 NT NT NTV 38
68 Jun 13 NT 48
68 Jun 20-21 NT 7 3
68 Jun 24 NT 2
68 Jun 25-26 NT NT NTV 4 14
68 Jun 27 NT 11

68 Jul 1 NT 10
68 Jul 3- 4 NT 16 10
68 Jul 8 NT 6
68 Jul 9 NT NT NTV 4
68 Jul 10 NT NTV 35
68 Jul 11-12 NT 10 7
68 Jul 16-17 NT 9 6
68 Jul 22 NT 19
68 Jul 23-24 NT NTV 11 3
68 Jul 25 NT 7
68 Jul 30-31 NT 7 5

68 Aug 6- 7 NT NT NTV 16 13
68 Aug 8- 9 NT 14 13
68 Aug 26 NT 4
68 Aug 27-28 NT NTV 5 4

68 Sep 3 NT 18
68 Sep 4- 5 NT NTV 14 12

92
68 Sep 13 NT 43
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
68 Sep 23 NT 22
68 Sep 24 NT NT NTV 4
68 Sep 25 NT NTV 2

68 Oct 7- 9 NT 15 7 9
68 Oct 10-12 NT 6 2 51
68 Oct 15-18 NT 5 5 9 8
68 Oct 20 NTV 7
68 Oct 21-23 NT NTV 2 1 3
68 Oct 31 NT 112

68 Nov 1- 4 NT 122 82 35 27
68 Nov 5 NT NT 6
68 Nov 6- 7 NT NT NTV 7 17
68 Nov 8 NTV 10
68 Nov 19-20 NT NT NTV 6 17
68 Nov 21 NT 6

68 Dec 3- 4 NT 18 21
68 Dec 13-14 NT 6 3
68 Dec 16 NT 8
68 Dec 17-18 NT NT 4 7
68 Dec 20-21 NT 3 13
68 Dec 23-24 NT NT 14 9
68 Dec 27-28 NT 13 5
68 Dec 30-31 NT 8 11

69 Jan 7- 8 NT 9 8
69 Jan 28-29 NT NTV 5 2
69 Jan 30 NT 6

69 Feb 5-11 NTV 10 16 9 9 4 12 62


69 Feb 12 NTV 10
69 Feb 17-19 NT 4 1 8
69 Feb 24 NT 6
69 Feb 26-28 NT 12 32 15

69 Mar 4- 6 NT 6 10 14
69 Mar 17-20 NT 38 11 17 22
69 Mar 25-27 NT 22 10 6
69 Mar 31 NTV 15

69 Apr 1 NTV 24
69 Apr 3 NT 17
69 Apr 9 NT 12
69 Apr 10 NT NT 6
69 Apr 11-15 NT 7 11 20 16 14
69 Apr 16-17 NT NT 17 21
69 Apr 22 NT 10
69 Apr 23-24 NT NTV 5 9
69 Apr 28-29 NT 60 12
69 Apr 30 NT 27

69 May 6- 8 NTV 8 5 5
69 May 13-14 NT 39 50
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
69 May 27-28 NT 3 9
69 May 30-31 NTV 11 12

69 Jun 1 NTV 5
69 Jun 24-25 NTV 12 10
69 Jun 26-27 NT 6 5

69 Jul 15-16 NTV 5 10


69 Jul 29-30 NTV 2 13

69 Aug 12-13 NTV 21 7


69 Aug 26-27 NTV 15 21

69 Sep 9 NTV 10
69 Sep 10 NT NTV 8
69 Sep 11 NTV 8
69 Sep 23-24 NT NTV 7 6

69 Oct 7- 8 NTV 6 3
69 Oct 21-22 NTV 8 7

69 Nov 13-14 NT NTV 5 2


69 Nov 15 NT 2
69 Nov 25-26 NTV 6 11

69 Dec 9-10 NTV 12 8


69 Dec 23-24 NTV 11 9

70 Jan 6- 7 NTV 5 5
70 Jan 19-22 NTV 5 7 6 5

70 Feb 4 NT 12
70 Feb 5 NT NTV 10
70 Feb 6 NTV 4
70 Feb 17-19 NTV 10 9 4

70 Mar 3- 4 NTV 15 16
70 Mar 14-15 NT 3 7
70 Mar 17-18 NTV 5 6
70 Mar 31 NTV 51

70 Apr 1 NTV 6
70 Apr 14-15 NTV 3 5
70 Apr 28-29 NTV 5 7

70 May 12-13 NTV 15 6


70 May 27-28 NTV 15 45

93
70 Jun 2- 3 NT 9 11
70 Jun 9-10 NTV 5 6
70 Jun 18-19 NT 27 8
70 Jun 26-27 NTV 13 35

70 Jul 7- 8 NTV 5 10
70 Jul 21-22 NTV 30 12
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
70 Aug 4- 5 NTV 4 3
70 Aug 18-19 NTV 36 14

70 Sep 1- 2 NTV 23 18
70 Sep 15-16 NTV 11 8

70 Oct 1- 2 NTV 10 9
70 Oct 13-14 NTV 9 8
70 Oct 28 NTV 15
70 Oct 30-31 NTV 9 4

70 Nov 1- 2 NTV 2 4
70 Nov 6-11 NTV 12 58 8 8 17 20

70 Dec 22-23 NTV 6 7

71 Jan 20-21 NTV 29 12

71 Feb 18-19 NTV 12 9

71 Mar 30-31 NTV 9 26

71 Apr 26-27 NTV 5 8

71 May 11-12 NTV 4 4


71 May 22-23 NTV 5 11

71 Jun 7- 9 NTV 3 7 3

71 Jul 6- 9 NTV 9 3 8 6
71 Jul 20-21 NTV 4 21

71 Aug 3- 4 NTV 4 7
71 Aug 11-12 NTV 15 10
71 Aug 31 NTV 32

71 Sep 1 NTV 10
71 Sep 23-24 NTV 2 6
71 Sep 29-30 NTV 6 23

71 Oct 19-20 NTV 2 4

71 Nov 2- 3 NTV 3 3
71 Nov 16-17 NTV 2 1
71 Nov 30 NTV 5

71 Dec 1 NTV 6
71 Dec 14-15 NTV 3 3
71 Dec 20-21 NTV 3 10
71 Dec 29-30 NTV 15 16

72 Jan 4- 5 NTV NTV 10 6


72 Jan 25-31 NTV 17 22 15 23 14 9 7

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
72 Feb 1 NTV 7
72 Feb 2- 3 NTV 13 9
72 Feb 17-18 NTV 22 12
72 Feb 24-25 NTV 33 16
72 Feb 29 NTV 2

72 Mar 1 NTV 8
72 Mar 28 NTV 11
72 Mar 29 NTV NTV 22
72 Mar 30 NTV 27

72 Apr 6- 7 NTV 8 8
72 Apr 12-13 NTV 10 12

72 May 2- 3 NTV 18 7
72 May 16-17 NTV NTV 18 9
72 May 30-31 NTV 14 12

72 Jul 9-11 NTV 6 7 6


72 Jul 12 NTV NTV 7
72 Jul 13 NTV 3
72 Jul 19-20 NTV 8 5

72 Aug 8 NTV 9
72 Aug 9 NTV NTV 74
72 Aug 10 NTV 18
72 Aug 17-18 NTV NTV 6 13
72 Aug 29-30 NTV 8 6
72 Aug 31 NTV 7

72 Sep 1 NTV 5
72 Sep 6- 7 NTV 10 5
72 Sep 12-13 NTV 5 53

72 Oct 3- 4 NTV 4 7
72 Oct 24-25 NTV 11 6

72 Nov 3- 4 NTV 13 6
72 Nov 15-16 NTV 17 31
72 Nov 23-24 NTV 11 5
72 Nov 29-30 NTV 9 4

94
72 Dec 11-12 NTV 3 8
72 Dec 17-20 NTV 13 8 7 4

73 Jan 16-17 NTV 8 5

73 Mar 20-21 NTV 80 58

73 Jun 19-25 NTV 38 18 6 3 10 34 6

73 Oct 30-31 NTV 28 19

73 Nov 13-14 NTV 10 8


73 Nov 22-23 NTV 7 8
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
73 Dec 18-19 NTV 3 13

74 Jan 15-16 NTV 15 15


74 Jan 22-23 NTV 5 4

74 Feb 12-13 NTV 40 20


74 Feb 26-27 NTV 28 26

74 Mar 19-20 NTV 2 23

74 Apr 3- 4 NTV 39 35
74 Apr 16-17 NTV 4 6
74 Apr 29-30 NTV 19 16

74 May 14-15 NTV 10 30

74 Jun 11-12 NTV 32 29


74 Jun 18-19 NTV 10 13

74 Jul 16-18 NTV 10 8 6

74 Aug 10 NTV NTV 16


74 Aug 11 NTV 10
74 Aug 12-14 NTV NTV 5 6 5
74 Aug 15 NTV 4

74 Sep 17-19 NTV NTV 3 19 34

74 Oct 15 NTV NTV 50


74 Oct 16-17 NTV 68 47
74 Oct 31 NTV 8

74 Nov 1 NTV 6
74 Nov 3 NTV 6
74 Nov 7-10 NTV 7 21 39 10
74 Nov 12-13 NTV NTV 70 36
74 Nov 14 NTV 38

74 Dec 10-12 T 20 21 18

75 Jan 5- 6 NTV 27 26
75 Jan 14 NTV 33
75 Jan 15-16 NTV NTV 15 21

75 Feb 11-13 NTV 36 35 27

75 Mar 9-13 NTV 8 80 53 37 29

75 Apr 15-16 NTV NTV 7 6


75 Apr 17 NTV 5

75 May 6- 8 NTV 35 22 14
75 May 18-19 NTV 7 15
75 May 22 NTV 11
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
75 Jun 10-11 NTV NTV 4 14

75 Jul 15-16 NTV NTV 15 12


75 Jul 17 NTV 14

75 Aug 12 T 4
75 Aug 13 NTV T 5
75 Aug 14 T 16

75 Sep 12-13 NTV 19 17


75 Sep 16-18 T 6 13 14

75 Oct 14-16 NTV T 9 5 10


75 Oct 19-20 NTV 3 5

75 Nov 3- 4 T 65 41
75 Nov 11-12 NTV 13 9
75 Nov 13 T 4

75 Dec 13-15 NTV 3 6 9


75 Dec 16-18 NTV 14 9 6
75 Dec 27-28 NTV 31 15

76 Jan 20-21 NTV 11 20

76 Feb 17-19 NTV 14 22 25

76 Mar 16-17 NTV 18 20

76 Apr 13-14 NTV NTV 13 16


76 Apr 25-26 NTV 9 5
76 Apr 29 NTV 17

76 May 12-13 NTV NTV 7 6


76 May 14-16 NTV 4 5 5

95
76 Jun 22-24 NTV 3 4 16

76 Jul 13-14 NTV 4 6


76 Jul 20-22 NTV 4 3 4

76 Aug 10 NTV NTV 9


76 Aug 11 NTV NTV NTV 5
76 Aug 12 NTV 3

76 Sep 20 NTV 51
76 Sep 21-22 NTV NTV 24 17
76 Sep 23 NTV 12

76 Oct 19-20 NTV NTV 7 7


76 Oct 21 NTV 7

76 Nov 16-17 NTV NTV 5 7


76 Nov 18 NTV 5
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
76 Dec 14-15 NTV 4 2
76 Dec 22 NTV 8

77 Jan 18-19 NTV 10 8


77 Jan 20 NTV NTV 12
77 Jan 21 NTV 5

77 Feb 14 NTV 11
77 Feb 15 NTV NTV NTV 8
77 Feb 16 NTV NTV 6
77 Feb 17 NTV 9

77 Mar 15 NTV NTV 5


77 Mar 16 NTV NTV NTV 6
77 Mar 17 NTV NTV 9

77 Apr 19-20 NTV NTV NTV 48 28


77 Apr 21-22 NTV 12 6

77 May 17 NTV NTV 18


77 May 18 NTV NTV NTV 11
77 May 19 NTV NTV 5

77 Jun 14-15 NTV 9 3


77 Jun 16 NTV NTV 10

77 Jul 19-21 NTV 23 29 10

77 Aug 16-18 NTV 9 29 13

77 Sep 8 NTV 8
77 Sep 13-15 NTV 28 10 9

77 Oct 11-13 NTV 12 28 14

77 Nov 15-17 NTV 25 14 8


77 Nov 23 NTV 2

77 Dec 6- 9 NTV 5 3 2 3

78 Jan 17 NTV 9
78 Jan 18 NTV NTV 12
78 Jan 19-20 T 6 3

78 Feb 8 NTV 10

78 Mar 7 NTV 9
78 Mar 8 NTV NTV 20
78 Mar 9 NTV 14

78 Apr 11 NTV 64
78 Apr 12 NTV NTV 29
78 Apr 13-14 NTV 24 51

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
78 May 10 NTV 10

78 Jun 1- 2 NTV 9 82
78 Jun 3- 6 NTV NTV 31 26 38 8
78 Jun 7 NTV NTV NTV 11
78 Jun 8 NTV NTV 10
78 Jun 9 NTV 4
78 Jun 10-12 NTV NTV 24 17 10
78 Jun 13-14 NTV 7 4

78 Jul 12-13 NTV 4 20

78 Aug 1- 2 NTV NTV 4 4

78 Sep 5 NTV 7
78 Sep 6 NTV NTV 14
78 Sep 7 NTV 6

78 Oct 17 NTV 5
78 Oct 18-19 NTV NTV 32 22

78 Nov 14-16 NTV 11 8 6

78 Dec 12 NTV 4
78 Dec 13-14 NTV NTV 7 28
78 Dec 16-18 T 14 9 48

79 Jan 16-18 NTV 12 7 11

79 Feb 13 NTV 3

96
79 Feb 14 NTV NTV 2
79 Feb 15 NTV 11

79 Mar 20 NTV 6
79 Mar 21 NTV NTV NTV 4
79 Mar 22 NTV NTV 45
79 Mar 23 NTV 12
79 Mar 24-28 NTV NTV 15 21 26 18 39

79 Apr 18 NTV 6

79 May 22-24 NTV 36 11 27

79 Jun 19 NTV 6
79 Jun 20 NTV NTV 8
79 Jun 21 NTV 15

79 Jul 17-19 NTV 14 15 11

79 Aug 21-23 NTV 22 12 5

79 Sep 18-20 NTV 64 6 22

79 Oct 16 NTV 8
79 Oct 17-18 NTV NTV 4 3
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
79 Nov 20 NTV 10
79 Nov 21 NTV NTV 6
79 Nov 22 NTV 2

79 Dec 19 NTV 6

80 Jan 15 NTV 6
80 Jan 16 NTV NTV 9
80 Jan 17-20 NTV 13 4 4 6

80 Feb 13 NTV 2

80 Mar 18 NTV 4
80 Mar 19-20 NTV NTV 10 4

80 Apr 15 NTV 20
80 Apr 16 NTV NTV 12
80 Apr 17 NTV 11

80 May 13 NTV 14
80 May 14 NTV NTV 17
80 May 15 NTV 6

80 Jun 10 NTV 33
80 Jun 11 NTV NTV 59

80 Jul 8 NTV 14
80 Jul 9 NTV NTV 8
80 Jul 10 NTV 4

80 Aug 12 NTV 8
80 Aug 13-14 NTV NTV 6 6

80 Sep 9 NTV 12
80 Sep 10 NTV NTV 4
80 Sep 11 NTV 6

80 Oct 8 NTV 12
80 Oct 10-12 NTV 22 40 11
80 Oct 22-23 NTV 23 44

80 Nov 12 NTV NTV 12


80 Nov 13-14 NTV 6 10

80 Dec 9 NTV 10
80 Dec 10-11 NTV NTV 10 16
80 Dec 12-18 NTV 16 6 8 10 16 5 15

81 Jan 8 NTVF 11
81 Jan 9 NTV 6
81 Jan 14 NTV NTV 6

81 Feb 4 NTV NTV 9

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
81 Mar 3 NTV 8
81 Mar 4 NTV NTV 12
81 Mar 30 NTV 16
81 Mar 31 NTV NTV 26

81 Apr 1 NTV NTV NTV 23


81 Apr 2 NTV 10

81 May 12 NTV 13
81 May 13 NTV NTV NTV 10
81 May 14 NTV 18

81 Jun 10-11 NTV NTV 4 6

81 Jul 14 NTVF NTV 7


81 Jul 15 NTV NTV 4
81 Jul 16 NTV 8

81 Aug 11-12 NTV NTV 15 9


81 Aug 13 NTV 9

81 Sep 29 NTV NTV NTV 14


81 Sep 30 NTV NTV NTV NTV 15

97
81 Oct 1 NTV NTV NTV 9
81 Oct 24 NTV 18
81 Oct 25 NTV NV 18
81 Oct 26 NTV 10
81 Oct 27 NTV NTV 10
81 Oct 28 NTV NTV NTV 19
81 Oct 29 NTV NTV 12

81 Nov 11-12 NV 31 39
81 Nov 17 N NTV 32
81 Nov 18 NTV NTV NTV NTV 26
81 Nov 19 NTV NTV 14
81 Nov 20-26 NTV 13 15 11 20 9 27 9
81 Nov 27-30 NTV 4 6 4 1

81 Dec 8- 9 NTV NV 15 10
81 Dec 15-17 NTV NTV NTV NTV 6 4 7
81 Dec 24 NTVF 10
81 Dec 26-29 NTVF 6 6 12 32

82 Jan 19-20 NTV NTV 3 6


82 Jan 21 NTV 14
82 Jan 26-27 NTV 7 13
82 Jan 30-31 NTV 27 34

82 Feb 1 NTV 41
82 Feb 9-10 NTV 15 35
82 Feb 16 NTV NTV 6
82 Feb 17 NTV NTV NTV 30
82 Feb 18 NTV NTV 34
82 Feb 23-25 NTV 29 24 42
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
82 Feb 26-27 NTVF 43 12

82 Mar 16-17 NTV NTV 4 14


82 Mar 18 NTV 20
82 Mar 27-29 NTV 9 6 13

82 Apr 19 NTV 8
82 Apr 20 NTVF NTV 20
82 Apr 21-22 NTV NTV NTV 32 18
82 Apr 24-25 NTV NTV 15 52
82 Apr 26 NTV 7

82 May 18-19 NTV NTV NTV 20 12


82 May 20 NTV NTV 8

82 Jun 15 NTV 26
82 Jun 16 NTV NTV 10
82 Jun 17 NTV 6

82 Jul 3- 5 NTV 6 2 4
82 Jul 14-15 NTV 153 36
82 Jul 20-22 NTV 24 11 16

82 Aug 7- 9 NTV 107 6 23


82 Aug 16 NTVF 6
82 Aug 17-19 NTVF NTV 16 16 10
82 Aug 20-21 NTV 12 15

82 Sep 14-15 NTV NTV 14 12


82 Sep 16 NTV 12
82 Sep 25 NTV 13

82 Oct 19-20 NTV NTV NTV 17 14


82 Oct 21 NTV NTV 11

82 Nov 16-17 NTV NTV 9 6


82 Nov 18 N NTV 12

82 Dec 14-16 NTV 8 11 13

83 Jan 11-13 NTV NTV 11 18 8

83 Feb 15-16 NTV NTV 25 30


83 Feb 17 NTV 16

83 Mar 14 NTV 26
83 Mar 15 NTV NTV 15
83 Mar 16-17 NTVF NTV 11 11
83 Mar 18 NTV 20

83 Apr 12 NTV NTV 11


83 Apr 13 NTV NTV NTVF 36
83 Apr 14 NTV 45
83 Apr 23-24 NTV 17 61
83 Apr 26 NTV 28
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
83 May 6- 8 NTV 14 8 11
83 May 17 NTV NTV 64
83 May 18 NTV NTV NTV 12
83 May 19 NTV NTV 5
83 May 20 NTV 10

83 Jun 14 NTV NTV 12


83 Jun 15-16 NTV NTV NTV 16 8
83 Jun 17-18 NTVF 17 37
83 Jun 25-26 NTV 5 13
83 Jun 27-30 TV 8 12 13 7

83 Jul 12 NTVF NTV 16


83 Jul 13-14 NTVF NTV NTV 19 6
83 Jul 15 NTV 5
83 Jul 22 NTV 10
83 Jul 23-24 NTV NTV 23 40

98
83 Jul 25 NTV 12

83 Aug 16 NTV 4
83 Aug 17-18 NTV NTV 6 2
83 Aug 26-27 NTV 26 5
83 Aug 28 NTV NTV 8

83 Sep 5- 6 TV 3 5
83 Sep 9-10 NTV 16 12
83 Sep 13-14 NTV NTV NTV 7 6
83 Sep 15 NTV NTV 21

83 Oct 4 NTVF NTV 43


83 Oct 5- 6 NTVF NTV NTV 8 22
83 Oct 7 NTV 11
83 Oct 8-10 NTVF 16 5 7

83 Nov 1- 2 NTV NTV NTV 19 35


83 Nov 3 NTV NTV 20
83 Nov 4 NTV TV 7
83 Nov 5- 6 TV 3 3
83 Nov 12-13 TV 44 24
83 Nov 14-15 TVF 28 23

83 Dec 13 NTV NTV NTVF 24


83 Dec 14 NTV N NTVF 24
83 Dec 15 N 17

84 Jan 16 NTV NTV NTVF 6


84 Jan 17-19 V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTVF 7 6 19
84 Jan 20 V N NTV NTVF 9
84 Jan 21 NTV 12
84 Jan 24-25 NTV 5 10

84 Feb 3- 4 NTVF 19 54
84 Feb 6 NTV 8
84 Feb 7- 8V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTVF 9 7
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
84 Feb 9 NTV NTV NTVF 9
84 Feb 22-23 NTV 8 15

84 Mar 5 NTV 4
84 Mar 6 NTV NTV NTV 31
84 Mar 7 NTV NTV NTV NTVF 26
84 Mar 8 NTV NTVF 29
84 Mar 26-27 TV 16 23

84 Apr 3- 4 NTV NTV 42 84


84 Apr 5 NTV 57
84 Apr 6 TV 12
84 Apr 24-25 NTV 6 33
84 Apr 26-27 NTV 103 26

84 May 8- 9 NTV NTV NTV 5 19


84 May 10 NTV NTV 27
84 May 14-16 NTV 12 9 7
84 May 29 NTV 9
84 May 30 NTV NTV TV 17
84 May 31 NTV 7

84 Jun 25 NTV 10
84 Jun 26 N NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 8
84 Jun 27-28 N NTVF NTV NTV NTV NTV 10 21
84 Jun 29 N NTV 12

84 Jul 23-25 NTV NTV NTV NTV 8 12 8


84 Jul 26 NTV 6

84 Aug 21-23 NTV 3 1 8

84 Sep 17 NTV NTV TV 6


84 Sep 18 NTV NTV NTV TV 3
84 Sep 19-21 NTV NTV NTV NTV 36 21 10
84 Sep 22 NTVF NTV TV 22
84 Sep 23-24 NTV 112 52

84 Oct 15 NTV 14
84 Oct 16-17 NTV NTV NTV NTV 19 3
84 Oct 18 NTV NTV NTV 43
84 Oct 22 NTV 46
84 Oct 23 NTV NTV 27
84 Oct 24 NTV 39

84 Nov 13-14 NTV NTV NTV 10 14


84 Nov 15 N NTV NTV 52
84 Nov 16 TV 112
84 Nov 25-29 TV 10 8 7 6 13

84 Dec 18 NTV NTV 15


84 Dec 19 NTV NTV NTV 8
84 Dec 20-21 NTV 6 13

85 Jan 14 NTV NTV 9


------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
85 Jan 15-17 NTV NTV NTV 9 8 9
85 Jan 18 NTV NTV 6

85 Feb 17-18 TV 12 4
85 Feb 19-22 NTV TV 7 10 8 7
85 Feb 23 TV 7

85 Mar 18 NTV 11
85 Mar 19 V NTV NTV NTV 9
85 Mar 20-22 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 5 5 4
85 Mar 25-27 NTV 5 8 10

99
85 Mar 28-29 NTV TV 14 6

85 Apr 10-11 NTV 11 11


85 Apr 12-13 NTV NTV 5 6
85 Apr 18-21 NTV TV 4 21 53 103
85 Apr 22 NTV 11
85 Apr 23-24 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 12 17
85 Apr 25-29 NTV 21 30 33 61 17

85 May 10-13 NTV 4 5 12 11


85 May 20 NTV 5
85 May 21-22 NTVF NTV NTV NTV NTV 8 5
85 May 23 V NTV 4

85 Jun 24 NTV 5
85 Jun 25-26 NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 12 21
85 Jun 27 NTV 13

85 Jul 16-18 NTV 5 20 13


85 Jul 23-25 NTV 13 12 12
85 Jul 29 NTV 5
85 Jul 30 NTV TV 11
85 Jul 31 TV 36

85 Aug 1 TV 18
85 Aug 4 NTV 6
85 Aug 12 NTV 27
85 Aug 13-14 NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 41 11

85 Sep 9 NTV 12
85 Sep 10-11 NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 12 9

85 Oct 14 NTV NTV TV 8


85 Oct 15-18 V NTV NTV NTV NTV TV 18 17 15 22
85 Oct 19 V NTV NTV 14
85 Oct 20 NTV 6

85 Nov 11 TV 10
85 Nov 12-13 NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 4 24
85 Nov 14 NTV 17
85 Nov 26 NTV 6

85 Dec 4- 5 NTV 12 8

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
86 Jan 10-11 TV 11 4
86 Jan 14-17 V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 4 5 3 6

86 Feb 3- 4 TV 6 5
86 Feb 6 TV 11
86 Feb 7-10 NTV TV 82 202 100 10
86 Feb 11-12 V NTV 20 18
86 Feb 13 NTV 15

86 Mar 4 NTV NTV 8


86 Mar 5 VF NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 8
86 Mar 6 VF NTV NTV NTV NTV 32
86 Mar 7 NTV 33
86 Mar 11-13 VF 2 7 21
86 Mar 31 NTV 7

86 Apr 1- 4 V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 8 5 14 4


86 Apr 27-28 NTV 4 11

86 May 6- 7 NTV NTV NTV NTV 67 12


86 May 8 NTV NTV 7
86 May 9-10 NTV 5 6

86 Jun 3 NTV 10
86 Jun 4 NTV NTV NTV 7
86 Jun 5 NTV NTV NTV NTV 5
86 Jun 15-17 NTV 5 5 8
86 Jun 23-25 NTV 5 7 3

86 Jul 8 NTV NTV NTV 6


86 Jul 9-10 VF NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 6 6
86 Jul 11-13 NTV NTV 4 6 7
86 Jul 14 NTV 4

86 Aug 26 NTV 12
86 Aug 27-28 VF NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 13 12
86 Aug 29 NTV 22

86 Sep 17 V 14
86 Sep 23-24 VF NTV NTV NTV NTV 43 22
86 Sep 25 VF NTVF NTV NTV NTV 26
86 Sep 26 VF NTVF NTV NTV 27

86 Oct 6- 7 V NTV 12 5
86 Oct 8-10 NTV NTV 6 6 3
86 Oct 27 V 16
86 Oct 28 V NTV 9
86 Oct 29 VF NTV V NTV NTV NTV NTV 15
86 Oct 30 VF NTVF V NTV NTV NTV NTV 14
86 Oct 31 NTV 6

86 Nov 1 NTV 13
86 Nov 6- 7 V 12 6
86 Nov 8- 9 NTV 4 3
86 Nov 18-20 NTV 6 4 5
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
86 Nov 26-27 VF 17 9

86 Dec 1- 2 V 13 8
86 Dec 9 NTV 6

100
86 Dec 10-11 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 12 8
86 Dec 12 NTV NTV 4
86 Dec 16-19 V 12 5 6 6

87 Jan 27 V NTVF NTV NTV NTV NTVF 7


87 Jan 28-30 V NTVF V NTV NTV NTV NTVF 11 10 4

87 Feb 9-13 NTV 11 8 7 18 4


87 Feb 28 NTV 13

87 Mar 1 NTV 9
87 Mar 2- 3 NTV NTV 3 6
87 Mar 4- 6 NTV 10 21 10
87 Mar 11-12 NTV 8 14
87 Mar 30 V 4
87 Mar 31 NTV V NTV NTV NTV 4

87 Apr 1 NTV V NTV NTV NTV 10


87 Apr 2- 3 V 4 2
87 Apr 23 V 4
87 Apr 27 V 9
87 Apr 28 NTV V NTV NTV NTV 2
87 Apr 29 NTV V NTV NTV 4
87 Apr 30 V 4

87 May 14-15 NTV 9 4


87 May 25-27 V 25 9 14

87 Jun 1 NTV V NTV NTV NTV 8


87 Jun 2 NTV V NTV NTV NTV NTV 8
87 Jun 3 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 4
87 Jun 4- 5 V NTV NTV 6 7

87 Jul 13-14 NTV 4 5


87 Jul 16 NTV 20
87 Jul 20-22 NTV 9 6 8

87 Aug 3- 5 NTV 12 7 13
87 Aug 8-10 NTV 10 8 4
87 Aug 26-27 V NTV NTV NTV 40 21

87 Sep 21-24 V NTV NTV NTV NTVF 10 29 17 14


87 Sep 25 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 46
87 Sep 26 V NTV NTVF 20

87 Oct 19 V 6
87 Oct 20-21 V V 8 13
87 Oct 22 V 5
87 Oct 23-26 NTV 11 19 28 11

87 Nov 6- 8 NTV 9 5 4
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
87 Nov 9-10 NTV NTVF 10 11
87 Nov 17-19 V 3 5 12
87 Nov 24-25 V NTVF V NTV NTV NTVF 24 12
87 Nov 26 V NTV 17

87 Dec 17 V 16
87 Dec 21-23 V 10 22 10

88 Jan 12-14 V NTVF V NTV NTV NTVF V 21 7 48


88 Jan 15-16 V NTVF NTV NTV NTVF V 63 5
88 Jan 18-22 V 12 10 12 9 7

88 Feb 8 V 5
88 Feb 9-10 V NTV 11 13
88 Feb 11-12 NTV 11 16
88 Feb 17 V 14
88 Feb 18 V NTV 19
88 Feb 19 NTV 7

88 Mar 6-12 V 19 11 26 13 12 14 9
88 Mar 13-14 V V 5 12
88 Mar 15 V 20
88 Mar 16 V NTVF V NTV NTV NTVF 14
88 Mar 17 V NTV V NTV NTV NTVF 9
88 Mar 18-20 V NTVF NTV NTV NTVF 7 4 6
88 Mar 21 NTVF 2

88 Apr 11 NTV 9
88 Apr 12-13 VF NTVF NTV NTV NTVF 14 10
88 Apr 14 VF 9
88 Apr 21-22 VF 8 44
88 Apr 25-27 VF NTV 6 5 6

88 May 17-18 VF 24 18
88 May 30 V 12

88 Jun 12 VF 4
88 Jun 13 VF NTV V NTV NTV NTV 6
88 Jun 14 VF NTV V NTV NTV 20
88 Jun 15 V NTV NTV 9

88 Jul 5- 7 NTV 5 11 8
88 Jul 12 NTVF V NTV NTV NTV 15
88 Jul 13 VF NTVF V NTV NTV NTV 5
88 Jul 14 VF V NTV 7

88 Aug 1- 3 V 8 5 6
88 Aug 19 NTV 8

88 Sep 10 NTV 7
88 Sep 12-13 NTV V NTV NTV NTV 20 10
88 Sep 14 V NTV NTV 11
88 Sep 15-16 NTV 12 6

88 Oct 8- 9 NTV 7 17

101
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
88 Oct 10 VF NTV 85
88 Oct 11-12 VF NTV V 13 6
88 Oct 13-14 VF NTV 6 6
88 Oct 17 V 15
88 Oct 25-27 NTV 4 7 8

88 Nov 7 VF 17
88 Nov 8 VF V 18
88 Nov 9 VF NTV V N NTV NTV 12
88 Nov 10 VF NTV V NTV NTV NTV 14
88 Nov 11 VF V NTV 10

88 Dec 3- 4 V 18 10
88 Dec 5 V NTV V NTV NTVF 4
88 Dec 6-10 V NTV V NTV NTV NTVF 3 3 5 4 8
88 Dec 11 NTVF V NTV 17
88 Dec 12 V 14

89 Jan 9 V 16
89 Jan 10 V NTV 12
89 Jan 11 V NTVF 37
89 Jan 12-13 NTVF 20 11

89 Feb 3- 6 NTV NTV 44 24 22 23


89 Feb 7- 8 NTV NTVF 25 14
89 Feb 9 NTV NTV 19
89 Feb 10 NTV 12
89 Feb 13-15 V 21 14 14

89 Mar 6 NTV V NTV NTVF 24


89 Mar 7 NTV V NTVF NTV NTVF 18
89 Mar 8 V NTVF NTV 24
89 Mar 9-10 NTVF 31 19
89 Mar 11 NTV 17
89 Mar 19-21 NTV 55 14 22
89 Mar 24 NTV 16
89 Mar 29 NTV 71

89 Apr 10 V NTV NTV NTV 8


89 Apr 11-12 VF NTV V NTV NTV NTVF 14 6
89 Apr 13 NTV NTV 17

89 May 8 V 5
89 May 9-10 VF NTV V NTV NTV NTV 5 4
89 May 11 NTV 6
89 May 22-23 NTVF 12 47
89 May 29 V 14
89 May 30-31 VF NTV V NTV NTV 9 13

89 Jun 1 VF NTV NTV NTV 11


89 Jun 2- 4 VF NTV NTV NTV NTV 19 14 14
89 Jun 5- 7 NTV 7 11 34

89 Jul 27-28 NTV 8 9

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
89 Aug 1 V NTV V NTVF NTV 6
89 Aug 2 V NTV V NTVF NTV NTV 6
89 Aug 3 V V NTV NTV NTV 5
89 Aug 28 V NTV V NTV NTV 22
89 Aug 29 V NTV V NTV 58
89 Aug 30 V NTV V NTV NTV NTV 17
89 Aug 31 V V NTVF NTV NTV 6

89 Sep 1 V V NTVF NTV NTV 8


89 Sep 14 NTVF 5
89 Sep 27-29 NTVF 8 8 8

89 Oct 2 VF NTV V NTV NTV NTVF 9


89 Oct 3 VF NTVF V NTV NTV NTVF 12
89 Oct 4 VF NTVF V NTVF NTV NTVF 6
89 Oct 5- 6 VF NTVF NTVF NTV NTVF 5 10
89 Oct 31 VF NTV NTVF NTVF 14

89 Nov 1 VF NTV NTV NTVF 8


89 Nov 27-28 VF NTV NTVF NTV 16 28
89 Nov 29 NTV 19

89 Dec 12-14 V 8 7 12

90 Jan 10-12 NTV 16 18 15


90 Jan 13-14 NTVF 9 8
90 Jan 15 NTV 9
90 Jan 16-17 V 10 9
90 Jan 22 NTV 19
90 Jan 23 NTV V 20
90 Jan 24-25 NTV V NTV NTV NTVF 32 19
90 Jan 26 NTV NTV 10
90 Jan 27-28 NTV NTVF 4 7

90 Feb 12 VF NTV NTVF NTV NTVF 6


90 Feb 13 NTV NTVF NTV NTVF 9
90 Feb 14-16 VF NTV NTV NTV NTVF 30 36 50
90 Feb 17 NTV NTVF 33
90 Feb 18 NTV 23
90 Feb 19-20 V NTVF 33 38
90 Feb 21 VF NTV V NTVF NTV NTVF 16
90 Feb 22 VF NTV NTVF NTV NTV 21
90 Feb 23 VF NTV NTV NTV NTV 36

90 Mar 16-17 NTV 7 3


90 Mar 18 NTVF 35
90 Mar 19 V NTVF 16
90 Mar 20 NTV V NTV NTV NTVF V V 30

102
90 Mar 21 NTV V NTVF NTV NTV V V 76
90 Mar 22 VF NTV NTVF NTV NTV V 28
90 Mar 23 VF NTV NTVF NTVF 29
90 Mar 27-29 NTVF 34 24 27

90 Apr 6 NTVF 7
90 Apr 7 NTV 8
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
90 Apr 8-10 NTVF 6 34 124
90 Apr 11-12 NTV 64 99
90 Apr 23-25 V NTVF 37 30 19
90 Apr 26 NTV 16
90 Apr 27-28 NTVF 15 20

90 May 21-22 VF NTV NTV NTV 22 32


90 May 24-25 V NTVF 8 20
90 May 26 NTV 47
90 May 27 NTVF 45
90 May 31 NTVF 11

90 Jun 1 NTVF 10
90 Jun 5- 6 NTVF 5 10
90 Jun 8 NTVF 16
90 Jun 9 NTV 32
90 Jun 25 VF NTV V NTV NTV NTV 7
90 Jun 26-27 VF NTV V NTV NTV 7 12
90 Jun 28-29 VF NTV NTV NTV 7 8

90 Jul 23-25 V 4 4 4

90 Aug 17-18 NTV 15 12

90 Sep 8 NTVF 8
90 Sep 18-19 NTVF 19 16
90 Sep 20-21 NTVF NTVF NTV NTVF 16 15
90 Sep 25-27 V 11 12 8

90 Oct 3 NTV 10
90 Oct 16-17 NTVF 10 5
90 Oct 22-24 V 10 10 25

90 Nov 13 NTVF NTVF NTV NTV 3


90 Nov 14-15 NTV NTVF NTV NTV 1 3
90 Nov 16-17 NTV 17 16
90 Nov 18 NTVF 15

90 Dec 17 NTV V NTVF 6


90 Dec 18-19 NTV V NTVF NTVF 5 2

91 Jan 2- 3 NTVF 10 11
91 Jan 8- 9 V 8 8
91 Jan 10 V NTVF 9
91 Jan 11 NTV NTVF NTV 7
91 Jan 12 NTV NTV NTV 19
91 Jan 13 NTV NTV 12
91 Jan 14 NTV 4
91 Jan 15-16 NTVF 12 7
91 Jan 17 NTV 11
91 Jan 18 NTVF 10

91 Feb 11 NTVF 16
91 Feb 12-14 V NTVF 13 11 8
91 Feb 16-17 NTVF 5 4
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
91 Mar 13 V 27
91 Mar 14-15 V NTVF NTV NTVF 7 6
91 Mar 16 NTVF NTV NTVF 8
91 Mar 17 NTVF NTV NTV NTVF 13
91 Mar 18 V NTVF NTV NTV NTVF 9
91 Mar 19 V NTVF V NTV NTV NTVF 12
91 Mar 20 V V NTV NTV NTVF 12
91 Mar 21 V NTV 26
91 Mar 22-23 NTV 20 11
91 Mar 26-27 V 114 31

91 Apr 9-10 V NTV V NTV NTVF 10 8


91 Apr 11 V NTV 5
91 Apr 30 V 34

91 May 1- 2 V 27 45
91 May 13-14 NTVF 27 33
91 May 15 NTV V 8
91 May 16 NTVF V 15
91 May 17-20 V 35 4 4 4
91 May 30-31 V 12 52

91 Jun 1- 4 V 74 60 16 58
91 Jun 5 NTV V 196
91 Jun 6 NTVF V 49
91 Jun 7-10 V 27 26 58 119
91 Jun 11 NTV V NTV NTV V 88
91 Jun 12 V NTV V NTV NTV V 66
91 Jun 13 V V NTV V 120
91 Jun 14 V NTVF V 8
91 Jun 15 NTVF V 13
91 Jun 16-17 V 5 67

91 Jul 1 V 11
91 Jul 2 V NTV 21
91 Jul 3 NTV 29
91 Jul 9 V 117
91 Jul 10 V N V NTV NTV 19
91 Jul 11 V N V NTVF NTV 20
91 Jul 12 V NTV 28
91 Jul 30 NTVF 8

103
91 Jul 31 NTV 6

91 Aug 1 NTV 36
91 Aug 2- 4 NTVF V 52 42 44
91 Aug 5 NTVF 32
91 Aug 19-21 V 74 67 41

91 Sep 10-11 V NTV V NTVF NTV NTVF 37 22


91 Sep 12 V NTVF 8
91 Sep 13 NTVF 13
91 Sep 14 NTV 26

91 Oct 7- 8 V NTV V NTVF NTV 32 41


------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
91 Oct 9 NTV V NTVF NTV 14
91 Oct 28 NTVF 98
91 Oct 29-30 NTV 128 34

91 Nov 5- 7 V 27 18 12
91 Nov 13 NTV 13
91 Nov 14-15 NTVF 18 30

91 Dec 3 V 12
91 Dec 4 V V NTVF NTVF V 15
91 Dec 5 V V NTVF NTV NTVF V 9
91 Dec 6-10 V NTV NTV NTVF V 5 6 8 10 15
91 Dec 11 NTV V 14

92 Jan 7- 8 NTVF 8 16
92 Jan 14 NTV 21
92 Jan 15-16 NTVF 18 27
92 Jan 27 V NTV V NTV NTV NTVF V 22
92 Jan 28-29 V NTV V NTVF NTV NTVF V 14 14
92 Jan 30 V 22

92 Feb 5 NTV 7
92 Feb 6 NTVF 7
92 Feb 25-27 V 55 65 60
92 Feb 29 NTVF 44

92 Mar 1- 2 NTVF 16 12
92 Mar 20 NTV 4
92 Mar 24-25 V 22 16
92 Mar 26 V V 12
92 Mar 27 V 11
92 Mar 28 NTVF V 10
92 Mar 29 V NTVF V 18
92 Mar 30 V NTVF NTV TVF V 12
92 Mar 31 V NTVF V NTV TVF 14

92 Apr 1- 2 V NTVF V NTV TVF 13 6


92 Apr 3 V NTVF NTV 32

92 May 5- 6 NTV NTV 5 5


92 May 11-13 V 70 11 21

92 Jun 2- 4 V 5 6 4
92 Jun 22 NTV 10
92 Jun 23-24 NTV NTV 13 22

92 Jul 20 VF 8
92 Jul 21 V NTV VF V 11
92 Jul 22 V VF V 34
92 Jul 23 V 16
92 Jul 30 NTV NTV NTV 9
92 Jul 31 V NTV NTV NTV 10

92 Aug 1- 5 VNTV NTV NTV 8 5 4 15 35


92 Aug 18-20 V 6 9 26
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
92 Sep 22-23 NTV NTV 17 9
92 Sep 24 NTV 4
92 Sep 28-30 V 16 62 35

92 Oct 26 V 14
92 Oct 27 NTV V NTV NTV 31
92 Oct 28 V NTV V NTV NTV 19
92 Oct 29 V NTV 27

92 Nov 23 V NTV NTV NTV 31


92 Nov 24-25 V NTV V NTV NTV 12 12
92 Nov 26 NTV V NTV NTV 10

92 Dec 8-10 V 26 19 17

93 Jan 20 NTV NTV NTV 14


93 Jan 21 NTV NTV NTVF 7
93 Jan 22 NTVF NTV NTVF 7
93 Jan 23-24 NTV NTV NTVF 4 10
93 Jan 25 NTVF NTV NTVF V 25
93 Jan 26 NTV NTVFD V 22
93 Jan 27-28 NTVF NTVFD V 11 7
93 Jan 29-30 NTV NTVFD V 5 12
93 Jan 31 V 59

93 Feb 8-10 V 40 28 17
93 Feb 16-18 V 6 36 13

93 Mar 17-18 V NTV NTV NTVFD 23 18


93 Mar 23-26 V 12 58 16 8

93 Apr 7- 8 V 12 26
93 Apr 21 V 33
93 Apr 26-27 V 5 4

104
93 May 18-19 NTV NTV NTVD 7 11

93 Jun 14 V 8
93 Jun 15-16 V NTV V NTV NTVD 5 3

93 Jul 20 NTV NTVD 16


93 Jul 21 NTV 14
93 Jul 27-29 V 10 6 18

93 Sep 7- 9 V 8 8 5
93 Sep 19-21 V 4 21 14

93 Oct 18 NTV V NTV NTVD 7


93 Oct 19 V NTV V NTV NTVD 9
93 Oct 20 V V 4
93 Oct 21-23 V 5 16 12
93 Oct 25 V V V V 40
93 Oct 26 V V V 17
93 Oct 27-28 V 38 21
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
93 Nov 2- 7 V V V V 4 15 77 34 26 23
93 Nov 8 V V V V V V 17
93 Nov 9 V NTV V NTV NTVD V V V V 11
93 Nov 10 V NTV V NTV NTVFD V V V V 12
93 Nov 11-12 V V V V 6 4

93 Dec 6 V 6
93 Dec 7 NTV V NTV NTVFD 20
93 Dec 8 NTV NTV NTVFD 47
93 Dec 9 NTV 3
93 Dec 28 V 3

94 Jan 10 V 2
94 Jan 11-12 V NTV V NTV NTV 24 29
94 Jan 13-14 V NTV NTV NTV 26 26

94 Feb 7 V NTV NTVF 62


94 Feb 8- 9 NTV V NTV NTVF 64 37
94 Feb 16 NTV 24
94 Feb 17 NTVF 11

94 Mar 14 V 34
94 Mar 15-16 V NTV NTVF 45 24
94 Mar 17-18 NTV 36 20

94 Apr 8- 9 NTVF 40 52
94 Apr 12-13 NTV V NTV NTVF 30 31
94 Apr 14 V 26
94 Apr 16 V V V 32
94 Apr 17-18 V V 100 20

94 May 3- 4 V NTV NTV NTV 44 26


94 May 9-11 V 26 33 26

94 Jun 6- 7 V 18 15
94 Jun 8 V NTV NTV 8
94 Jun 9 NTV NTV NTV 8
94 Jun 10-11 V V V 17 14

94 Jul 5- 6 NTV NTV NTV 5 10


94 Jul 11-13 V 4 2 4

94 Aug 6 NTV 4
94 Aug 7 V NTVF 4
94 Aug 8 V NTV 2
94 Aug 9 V NTVF 4
94 Aug 10 V NTV NTV 11
94 Aug 11-13 V NTV NTV NTV 14 18 27
94 Aug 14-16 NTV NTV 26 13 9

94 Sep 6- 7 NTV NTV NTVF 14 40


94 Sep 29-30 V 6 4

94 Oct 1- 2 V 4 16
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
94 Oct 3 V NTVF 88
94 Oct 4 NTV V NTVF NTV NTVF 32
94 Oct 5 NTV V NTV NTV NTVF 40
94 Oct 17-20 V 5 5 8 9
94 Oct 31 V 37

94 Nov 8 NTV NTVF NTVF 5


94 Nov 9 NTV NTV NTVF 17
94 Nov 10-11 NTVF 17 8

94 Dec 2- 3 NTVF 24 15
94 Dec 5 NTV 7
94 Dec 6- 7 NTV NTV NTV 26 17
94 Dec 8 NTV 14

95 Jan 23-24 V 7 4
95 Jan 25 V NTV 5
95 Jan 26 NTVF 3
95 Jan 30-31 NTVF 39 29

95 Feb 1- 4 V NTV NTVF 15 26 24 23


95 Feb 28 V NTV NTVF 34

95 Mar 1 V NTV V NTV NTVF 35


95 Mar 2 V NTV V NTVF NTV NTVF 26
95 Mar 3 NTV 6
95 Mar 15-16 V V V V 13 14
95 Mar 23-24 V V V V 6 5
95 Mar 28-29 V NTV NTV NTVF 18 19
95 Mar 31 NTV 7

105
95 Apr 1- 2 NTV 13 22
95 Apr 5- 7 V V V V 10 6 100
95 Apr 26-28 V NTV 18 30 12

95 May 1 V NTV NTV NTVF 3


95 May 2 V NTV NTVF NTV NTVF 49
95 May 3 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 48
95 May 4 V NTV NTVF NTV NTV 35
95 May 5 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 43
95 May 6 NTV 26
95 May 30 NTV 39
95 May 31 NTVF 30

95 Jun 20-21 NTVF NTV NTV 20 10


95 Jun 27-28 NTV 6 10

95 Jul 28 NTV 6

95 Aug 22 NTV V V V V 16
95 Aug 23 NTV NTV V V V 12
95 Aug 24 NTV NTVF NTV 6
95 Aug 25 NTVF 15

95 Sep 24 NTVF 8
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
95 Sep 25 NTV 4
95 Sep 26 V 4
95 Sep 27-28 NTV V NTVF NTV NTV 41 15
95 Sep 29 NTVF 3

95 Oct 18-19 V V V V V V V 32 31
95 Oct 20 V V V V V V 34
95 Oct 21-22 V V V V V 13 12
95 Oct 23 NTV V NTVF NTV V V V V V V 19
95 Oct 24 NTV V NTV NTV NTV V V V V 10
95 Oct 25 NTV V NTV NTV NTV 4
95 Oct 26-27 NTV NTVF NTV NTV 3 6

95 Nov 17-18 NTVF 7 5


95 Nov 20 V 4
95 Nov 21 V NTV NTV 3
95 Nov 22 V V NTV NTV 6
95 Nov 23-24 V 4 2

96 Jan 22-24 V NTV NTV 6 5 6


96 Jan 25 V 5

96 Feb 13-14 NTV NTV 14 15


96 Feb 24-27 V 20 18 16 14

96 Mar 19-22 V VF NTV NTV 15 23 38 17


96 Mar 23 V 8

96 Apr 16-17 NTV 9 31

96 May 14-15 NTV NTV 11 8


96 May 19-20 NTV V V V V V V 7 10
96 May 21 V V V 8
96 May 26-28 VF V V V V V V 6 9 4
96 May 29 V V V V V V V 8
96 May 30 V V V V V V 7
96 May 31 V V V 7

96 Jun 17 NTV 7
96 Jun 18-19 NTV NTV 7 12

96 Jul 16-17 NTV NTV 5 8

96 Aug 13-14 V NTV NTV 5 12


96 Aug 15 VF 6

96 Sep 17-18 V NTV NTV 9 18


96 Sep 19 V 15

96 Oct 7 NTF 4
96 Oct 8 NTF VF NTV NTV 10
96 Oct 9 NTF V NTV NTV 20
96 Oct 10 NT V NTV NTV 10
96 Oct 11 NT VF NTV NTV 8
96 Oct 12 NTF VF NTV NTV 15
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
96 Oct 13 NTF 19

96 Nov 6- 7 NTV 8 4
96 Nov 11-13 NTV 4 8 16
96 Nov 14 NTV NTV 21
96 Nov 15-19 NTV 15 5 13 14 10
96 Nov 21-23 NTV 6 4 4
96 Nov 24 V V V V V V 12
96 Nov 25 V V 7

96 Dec 9 NTV 9
96 Dec 10-11 NTV NTV 25 14
96 Dec 17-18 NTV 10 6

97 Jan 1- 2 NTV 4 5
97 Jan 6- 8 NTV NTVF NTV NTV 3 11 8
97 Jan 9 NTV NTVF NTV NTV V V V V V 5
97 Jan 10 NTV NTV NTV NTV V V V V V V 32
97 Jan 11 V V V V V V 18

97 Feb 10-12 NTV 22 21 7

97 Mar 11 NTV NTV NTV NTV 3

106
97 Mar 12 NTVF NTV NTV NTV 13
97 Mar 13-16 NTV 8 5 7 7

97 Apr 5 NTVF 11
97 Apr 6 NTV 10
97 Apr 7 NTVF 9
97 Apr 8 VF NTVF NTV NTV NTV 4
97 Apr 9 VF NTVF NTV NTV NTV V V V V V 6
97 Apr 10 VF NTV NTV NTV V V V V V V 13
97 Apr 11 VF V V V V V V 37
97 Apr 12-13 V V V V V V 9 8

97 May 14-15 NTV V V V V V V 6 56


97 May 16-18 V V V V V V 10 9 5

97 Jun 3- 6 NTV NTV 9 5 3 8


97 Jun 23 NTVF NTV NTV 6
97 Jun 24-27 NTV NTV NTV 4 7 4 17
97 Jun 28 NTV 8

97 Aug 13-14 NTV 11 16


97 Aug 27-29 NTV NTV 3 16 13

97 Sep 2- 3 NTV NTV 4 26

97 Oct 4- 5 VF 4 2
97 Oct 20 NTVF 5
97 Oct 21-22 NTVF NTV NTV 3 4
97 Oct 23 NT NTVF NTV NTV 7
97 Oct 28-31 NT 15 8 6 4

97 Nov 3 NTV 3
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
97 Nov 4 NTVF NTV NTV 8
97 Nov 5 NTVF NTV 7
97 Nov 6- 7 NTVF 17 44
97 Nov 8-10 NTV 5 11 11

97 Dec 2- 4 NT NTV NTV 4 6 6


97 Dec 9-10 NTV 1 18

98 Jan 19 NTV 4
98 Jan 20-21 NTVF NTV NTV NTV 15 8
98 Jan 22-27 NTV 4 4 6 11 3 7
98 Jan 31 NTV 12

98 Feb 1 NTV 9

98 Mar 10-12 V V V V V V 53 28 14
98 Mar 13 V V 12
98 Mar 23-27 NT NTV NTV NTV NTV 6 7 16 12 15
98 Mar 28 NT NTV 11

98 Apr 26 V V V V V V 31
98 Apr 27-29 NTF NTV NTV NTV NTV V V V V V V 12 8 4
98 Apr 30 NTF NTV NTV NTV V V V V V V 12

98 May 1 NTV V V V V V V 9
98 May 2 V V V V V V 63
98 May 3 V V V V V 62
98 May 4- 8 V V V V V V 101 42 5 10 23
98 May 9 V V 13
98 May 26-28 VF NTV NTV 8 6 5
98 May 29 VF 26

98 Jun 23-24 NT NTVF NTV NTV NTV 10 16


98 Jun 25 NT V V V V V V 9
98 Jun 26 NTF V V V V V V 42
98 Jun 27-28 V V V V V V 4 3

98 Jul 6 NTV 19
98 Jul 15-17 V 3 37 7

98 Aug 11-14 NTV 6 7 5 6


98 Aug 17 NTV NTV 3
98 Aug 18-19 NTVF NTV NTV NTV NTV 4 9
98 Aug 20-22 NTV 17 4 17

98 Sep 20 NTF 5
98 Sep 21-23 NTF NTV NTV NTV 12 7 11
98 Sep 24-25 NTF NTV NTV NTV V V V V V V 28 117
98 Sep 26-27 NT NTV V V V V V V 17 10
98 Sep 28 V V V V V V 4

98 Oct 18 NTV 9
98 Oct 19-21 VF NTVF NTVF NTV NTV 62 22 23
98 Oct 22 VF 20

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
98 Nov 22-24 NTV NTV 6 11 16
98 Nov 25 NTV 13

98 Dec 8- 9 NT NTVF NTV NTV 4 6


98 Dec 13-14 V 3 5
98 Dec 20-22 NTV 12 4 4

99 Jan 12 V NTVF NTV NTV 5


99 Jan 13 V NTV NTV NTV 40
99 Jan 14 V 29

99 Feb 9-11 V NTV NTVF NTV NTV NTV NTV 3 6 20


99 Feb 12 V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 24
99 Feb 13 V 8
99 Feb 25 NTV 6

107
99 Mar 3- 4 NTV 16 30
99 Mar 5 NTV NTV 16
99 Mar 8 NT NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 12
99 Mar 9-11 NT NTV NTVF NTV NTV NTV NTV 21 34 15
99 Mar 12 NT NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 11
99 Mar 15 NTV 14
99 Mar 17-18 NTV 5 6

99 Apr 8 NTV 8
99 Apr 16 NT NTV 18
99 Apr 17-18 NTF 47 6
99 Apr 19 NTF NTVF NTV 12
99 Apr 20 NTF NTVF NTV NTV NTV NTV 24
99 Apr 21 NTF NTVF NTVF NTV NTV NTV 12
99 Apr 22 NTF NTV NTVF NTV NTV NTV 4
99 Apr 23 NTV 5

99 May 5- 6 NTV 7 9
99 May 9-12 V V V V 5 4 2 8

99 Jul 1- 5 NTV 6 26 9 2 2
99 Jul 6 NTV NTV NTV 8
99 Jul 7- 8 NTV NTV NTV NTV 4 6
99 Jul 9 NTV NTV 4

99 Sep 2 NTV 9
99 Sep 5 NTV 6
99 Sep 13 NTVF 46
99 Sep 14 NTVF NTV 21
99 Sep 15-17 V NTVF NTV NTV NTV 27 31 16
99 Sep 18 V NTV 13

99 Oct 8- 9 NTV 7 6
99 Oct 11 NTF 29
99 Oct 12 NTV NTV NTV NTV 46
99 Oct 13 V NTV NTV NTV 23
99 Oct 14 V NTV NTVF NTV 31

99 Dec 1- 3 NTV 5 5 16
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
99 Dec 5- 8 NTV 20 18 16 14
99 Dec 9-10 NTV NTV NTV 14 10
99 Dec 11-15 NTV 7 11 26 3 4
99 Dec 17 NTV 7

00 Jan 6- 7 NTV NTV 19 10

00 Feb 5 NTV 12
00 Feb 7-10 NTV 31 15 11 10
00 Feb 16-18 NTV 7 6 1
00 Feb 20 NTV 5
00 Feb 24 NTV 30

00 Mar 14-15 V NTV NTVF NTV NTV NTV 6 2


00 Mar 16 V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 2
00 Mar 17 V NTVF NTV NTV NTV 4
00 Mar 18 V NTV 6
00 Mar 19-20 NTV 7 6
00 Mar 31 NTV 23

00 Apr 11 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 9


00 Apr 12-13 V NTV NTVF NTV NTV 7 6
00 Apr 14 V 2

00 May 11-13 NTV 4 15 14

00 Jul 5- 6 NTV NTV NTV NTV 9 5


00 Jul 7 NTVF NTV NTV NTV 5
00 Jul 13 NTVF NTV 42
00 Jul 14 NTV NTV V 51
00 Jul 15-16 NTVF NTV NTV V 164 50
00 Jul 17 NTV V 8
00 Jul 18-21 NTV 12 14 36 7
00 Jul 23-24 NTV 23 5
00 Jul 26-29 NTV 19 7 32 27

00 Aug 1 NTV 12
00 Aug 2 NTVF NTV 10
00 Aug 22-23 NTV 2 7

00 Sep 22-23 NTV 6 7


00 Sep 24 V NTV NTV 12
00 Sep 25-27 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 19 24 11
00 Sep 28 V NTV NTV NTV 12
00 Sep 29 V 7

00 Oct 11-12 V 15 6
00 Oct 13-14 NTV 36 45
00 Oct 18 NTV 9
00 Oct 23 NTV 15
00 Oct 24 NTVF NTV NTV 9
00 Oct 25-26 V NTVF NTV NTV NTV 6 8
00 Oct 27 V NTV NTV NTV 4
00 Oct 28-30 V 20 34 15

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
00 Nov 9-10 NT V 13 42
00 Nov 11-13 V V 16 20 9
00 Nov 14 V 5
00 Nov 22-28 NTV 8 6 11 6 28 45 31
00 Nov 29-30 NTV 56 6

00 Dec 1- 5 NTV 6 3 10 9 5
00 Dec 6 NTVF 7
00 Dec 7 NTV 15

108
00 Dec 8 NTVF 18
00 Dec 11 V NTV NTV NTV 8
00 Dec 12-13 V NTVF NTV NTV 5 5
00 Dec 14 V NTV NTV 3
00 Dec 15 V NTV 2
00 Dec 16 V 3

01 Jan 7 NTV 5
01 Jan 14 NTV 8
01 Jan 23 NTV 18
01 Jan 24 NTVF 20

01 Feb 2 NTV 6
01 Feb 5-11 NTV 3 14 6 6 5 6 6
01 Feb 12 NTV 6
01 Feb 13-14 NT NTVF NTV NTV NTV 25 19
01 Feb 15 NT NTV NTV NTV NTV 5
01 Feb 16-20 NTV 3 2 3 4 7
01 Feb 21-22 NTVF NTV 6 5
01 Feb 23 NTV 10
01 Feb 26 NTV 10

01 Mar 3 NTV 15
01 Mar 9-10 NTV 6 5
01 Mar 14 NTV 7
01 Mar 17 NTV 4
01 Mar 20 NTVF 74
01 Mar 21 NTVF NTV NTV 8
01 Mar 22-23 NTV 12 28
01 Mar 28-29 NTV 44 22
01 Mar 30-31 NTV 12 192

01 Apr 1 NTV 38
01 Apr 2- 3 NTVF NTV 22 6
01 Apr 4 NTVF NTV NTV 23
01 Apr 5- 6 NTV 19 13
01 Apr 11 NTVF 85
01 Apr 12 NTV NTV 50
01 Apr 13 NTVF NTV 50
01 Apr 14 NTV NTV 18
01 Apr 15 NTV 13
01 Apr 16 NTV NTV NTV 8
01 Apr 17 V NTV NTV NTV NTV 6
01 Apr 18-19 V NTV NTV 50 6
01 Apr 20 V 6
01 Apr 21-22 NTV 8 37
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
01 May 16 NTV 7
01 May 17 NTV 6

01 Jun 27-28 NTV 6 2

01 Jul 2- 5 NTV 4 6 6 12
01 Jul 7- 9 NTV 5 14 10
01 Jul 10 V NTV 9
01 Jul 11-15 V NTV NTV 7 6 6 12 10
01 Jul 18-20 NTV 8 7 4
01 Jul 26-27 NTVF 10 6

01 Aug 1- 7 J 9 6 12 6 21 17 7
01 Aug 9-13 J 7 6 4 12 22
01 Aug 14-17 J NTV 10 5 3 42
01 Aug 18-22 J 15 8 6 13 19
01 Aug 23 J NTV 8
01 Aug 25 J 10
01 Aug 26 J NTV 10
01 Aug 27 J NTV NTV 13
01 Aug 28 J 11
01 Aug 29 J NTV 5
01 Aug 30-31 J 10 12

01 Sep 1- 6 J 4 4 17 15 8 5
01 Sep 7 J NTV 3
01 Sep 8- 9 J 6 4
01 Sep 10 NTV 3
01 Sep 11 NTV NTV 9
01 Sep 12-14 NTV 12 18 9
01 Sep 16 NTV 8
01 Sep 17-20 V NTV NTV 6 11 9 4
01 Sep 21 V J NTV 4
01 Sep 22-23 J NTV 8 41
01 Sep 24 J 8
01 Sep 25-27 NTV 33 26 11

01 Oct 1 J NTV 48
01 Oct 2- 4 J 52 69 17
01 Oct 5 NTV 8
01 Oct 8 NTV 16
01 Oct 9 NTV NTV 18
01 Oct 10 NTV NTV NTV 7
01 Oct 11 NTV NTV 21
01 Oct 12 NTV 34
01 Oct 16-18 NTV NTV NTV 7 4 3
01 Oct 19 J NTV 9
01 Oct 20 J NTV 11
01 Oct 21-22 J 57 96
01 Oct 24 J 2
01 Oct 26 J 4
01 Oct 27 J NTV 6
01 Oct 28 J 44
01 Oct 29-30 NTV 14 7
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
01 Nov 3 NTV 2
01 Nov 5- 7 NTV 21 142 19
01 Nov 11 NTV 5

109
01 Nov 13-15 NT NTV NTV NTV 4 3 9
01 Nov 16-20 NTV 7 13 10 20 8
01 Nov 27 NTV 2
01 Nov 28-30 J 2 3 2

01 Dec 1- 3 J 7 4 8
01 Dec 4 J NTV 10
01 Dec 5- 9 NTV 11 11 6 6 3
01 Dec 10 V NTV NTV 4
01 Dec 11-12 V NTV NTV NTV 4 11
01 Dec 13-14 V NTV NTV 3 4
01 Dec 15 V NTV 9
01 Dec 16 NTV 10
01 Dec 17-19 NTV NTV 16 9 8
01 Dec 20-21 NTV 4 14
01 Dec 26-31 J 6 7 4 11 21 15

02 Jan 1 J 8
02 Jan 3- 9 J 2 3 2 2 7 11 2
02 Jan 10-13 J 19 27 17 13
02 Jan 14-18 J NTV 8 7 4 8 5
02 Jan 19-21 J 14 10 11
02 Jan 22 J NTV 6
02 Jan 23-24 J 8 4
02 Jan 25 NTV 10
02 Jan 27-29 J 8 7 4
02 Jan 31 J NTV 6

02 Feb 1 J NTV 14
02 Feb 2 J 19
02 Feb 4- 5 J NTV 6 23
02 Feb 6-11 J 22 15 11 11 9 14
02 Feb 13 J 12
02 Feb 15 NTV 3
02 Feb 18 NTV 11
02 Feb 25 NTV 6

02 Mar 4 NTV 10
02 Mar 14 NTV 3
02 Mar 18-19 V 14 19
02 Mar 20 V NTV 9
02 Mar 21 NTV NTV 7
02 Mar 22-25 NTV 6 13 45 7
02 Mar 26-27 V NTV NTV 11 4

02 Apr 2- 8 NTV 14 14 5 3 4 7 2
02 Apr 9-11 NTV 3 5 15
02 Apr 15-16
V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 6 7
02 Apr 17 V NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV NTV 62
02 Apr 18 V NTV NTV NTV 63
02 Apr 19 V NTV NTV 62
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
02 Apr 20 NTV NTV 70
02 Apr 21 NTV 5
02 Apr 22-24 J 11 27 7

02 May 5 NTV 3
02 May 21-24 NTV 10 8 78 2
02 May 31 V 3

02 Jun 1- 5 V 4 16 10 13 6
02 Jun 6- 9 J 4 5 14 8
02 Jun 11-12 NT NTV NTV 8 6
02 Jun 13 NT 7
02 Jun 14-18 J 4 4 7 4 10
02 Jun 24-30 J 5 8 5 2 2 5 12

02 Jul 1- 7 J 14 5 4 5 12 22 8
02 Jul 8-10 J 8 12 7
02 Jul 12-14 J 19 6 2
02 Jul 25-31 J 12 12 17 11 10 6 7

02 Aug 1 J 25
02 Aug 5-11 J 4 4 4 6 14 15 13
02 Aug 13-14 NT NTV 8 12
02 Aug 15-21 J 22 11 8 21 30 30 32
02 Aug 22 J 8
02 Aug 28-31 J 7 8 8 7

02 Sep 1- 7 J 11 8 7 42 7 7 57
02 Sep 8 J 36
02 Sep 9-11 NT 9 24 26
02 Sep 12 NT J 14
02 Sep 13-17 J 11 8 6 6 11
02 Sep 20-23 J 4 6 6 2
02 Sep 25-30 J 2 5 6 5 4 28

02 Oct 1- 2 J 67 53
02 Oct 4 NTV 64
02 Oct 5- 6 NTV NTV 28 15
02 Oct 7- 9 V NTVF NTV 48 33 20
02 Oct 10-11 V NTV NTV 16 6
02 Oct 12 V NTV 6
02 Oct 13 NTV 5
02 Oct 14 NTVF 23
02 Oct 15-21 J NTVF 18 18 13 14 14 10 8
02 Oct 22-24 J NTVF 10 11 63
02 Oct 25-27 J NTV 39 27 25
02 Oct 28-31 J NTVF 19 14 16 20

02 Nov 1- 2 J NTVF 7 28
02 Nov 3- 5 J 35 23 24
02 Nov 11-15 V NTV 12 17 13 8 12
02 Nov 16 V 7
02 Nov 20-26 J 25 50 26 17 15 15 13
02 Nov 27-28 J 24 12

110
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
02 Dec 3- 5 NT NTV 11 12 9
02 Dec 6-12 J 9 18 12 6 5 4 5
02 Dec 13-17 J 4 13 8 5 3
02 Dec 19-23 J 25 21 21 10 24
02 Dec 27-31 J 37 19 13 11 7

03 Jan 1- 6 J 7 6 18 16 7 4
03 Jan 17-19 J 7 12 18
03 Jan 24-26 J 18 28 20
03 Jan 31 J 17

03 Feb 8- 9 J 16 19
03 Feb 25-26 J 5 15
03 Feb 28 J 18

03 Mar 1- 2 J 15 11
03 Mar 18 J 28
03 Mar 19-23 V NTVF 12 25 30 16 22
03 Mar 24 V 6
03 Mar 25 J 3
03 Mar 27-31 J 25 27 37 39 43

03 Apr 4- 6 J 28 28 9
03 Apr 8- 9 J 22 22
03 Apr 18-24 J 21 9 14 22 23 19 27
03 Apr 25-30 J 33 15 13 14 27 45

03 May 2- 7 J 15 9 5 14 28 38
03 May 10-16 J 42 31 20 24 29 22 9
03 May 17-18 J 7 8
03 May 27-30 NTV 30 34 109 59

03 Jun 9-11 J 28 24 12
03 Jun 13-19 J 9 28 18 40 49 60 14
03 Jun 20-22 J 11 22 12
03 Jun 24 NTV 23
03 Jun 25-26 NT NTV 16 16
03 Jun 28-29 J 42 24

03 Jul 3- 6 J 19 22 18 9
03 Jul 11 J 52
03 Jul 14-15 J 14 28
03 Jul 18-20 J 15 30 17
03 Jul 29-31 J 38 27 35

03 Aug 1- 3 J 39 21 14
03 Aug 8-11 J 33 14 9 10
03 Aug 15 J 11
03 Aug 22-24 J 46 36 20
03 Aug 25-27 NT 20 11 8
03 Aug 28 NT J 18
03 Aug 29-31 J 16 14 6

03 Sep 1- 7 J 13 12 15 22 16 8 4
03 Sep 8 J 5
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
03 Sep 10-11 J 21 14
03 Sep 13-17 J 8 4 4 34 70
03 Sep 19-21 J 39 27 18
03 Sep 22-25 V NTV 17 15 41 28
03 Sep 26 V J NTV 15
03 Sep 27 V J 6
03 Sep 29-30 J 4 4

03 Oct 1- 5 J 10 8 17 5 5
03 Oct 7 NT 15
03 Oct 8 J 6
03 Oct 10 J 2
03 Oct 12-13 J 4 16
03 Oct 17 J 32
03 Oct 21-23 NTV 49 34 6

03 Nov 7- 8 J 8 8
03 Nov 11-16 V NTV 61 30 52 38 40 41
03 Nov 17 V 39
03 Nov 19-20 J 12 150
03 Nov 24-25 J 13 14

03 Dec 2- 3 J 7 4
03 Dec 5- 8 J 39 23 14 35
03 Dec 10-11 J 41 40
03 Dec 16-18 V NTV 10 7 3
03 Dec 19 V J 1
03 Dec 20-26 J 16 24 18 7 6 5 8
03 Dec 27-31 J 11 13 5 6 19

04 Jan 1- 6 J 24 15 22 22 25 24
04 Jan 9 J 23
04 Jan 12 J 9
04 Jan 18 J 18
04 Jan 22-25 J 64 43 18 38
04 Jan 30-31 J 19 10

04 Feb 1- 2 J 10 18
04 Feb 16-18 NT 7 4 8
04 Feb 19 NT J 8
04 Feb 20 J 4
04 Feb 27-29 J 12 19 24

04 Mar 1- 7 J 21 21 13 6 5 3 3
04 Mar 9-10 NT 28 45
04 Mar 11 NT J 40
04 Mar 12-15 J 28 14 16 15
04 Mar 16-18 V 10 6 10

111
04 Mar 19 NV 7
04 Mar 20-24 N 12 11 13 7 3
04 Mar 26 N 17
04 Mar 28 N 21
04 Mar 29-31 V NTVF 10 14 9

04 Apr 1- 2 V NTVF 4 3
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
04 Apr 3 V J NTVF 41
04 Apr 5-11 J 24 25 12 14 16 11 10
04 Apr 12-13 J 10 6
04 Apr 14-15 NT 4 7
04 Apr 19-22 NT 6 4 7 4
04 Apr 23-26 N 19 10 11 5
04 Apr 27-29 NT 4 9 4

04 May 3- 6 J 6 7 14 8
04 May 10-14 V 6 12 12 12 5
04 May 17-20 NT NTV 4 4 9 13
04 May 21-25 J 7 8 11 10 4
04 May 28-31 J 7 15 12 12

04 Jun 1 J 16
04 Jun 8-11 V 9 13 10 5
04 Jun 14-19 V NTV 10 18 7 7 9 4

04 Jul 9-12 J 4 6 18 12
04 Jul 15-19 J 6 9 21 6 8
04 Jul 29-31 J 6 7 7

04 Aug 1 J 8
04 Aug 3- 9 J 3 3 5 5 15 3 14
04 Aug 13-16 J 6 7 4 5
04 Aug 20-22 J 15 16 12
04 Aug 23-26 NT 5 3 4 5
04 Aug 27-31 J 6 7 5 42 28

04 Sep 3- 6 J 2 2 7 14
04 Sep 13-16 NT NTV 8 32 14 19

04 Oct 1- 3 N 3 11 12
04 Oct 8-10 N 5 5 8
04 Oct 17 N 2
04 Oct 22-28 J 6 2 8 12 1 3 2
04 Oct 29-31 J 6 17 12

04 Nov 1- 7 J 5 4 10 8 4 1 50
04 Nov 9-13 V NTV 119 161 24 30 7

04 Dec 6- 9 NT NTV 20 15 11 8
04 Dec 16-22 J 13 16 13 3 4 12 20
04 Dec 23-29 J 6 3 14 11 8 16 16
04 Dec 30-31 J 18 7

05 Jan 1- 7 J 18 37 19 26 17 4 40
05 Jan 8-10 J 36 4 6
05 Jan 14-17 J 16 18 16 58
05 Jan 20-26 J 17 66 33 19 10 4 3
05 Jan 27-31 J 2 6 20 17 19

05 Feb 3- 6 J 9 3 2 10
05 Feb 7-10 N 30 32 25 21
05 Feb 11-13 J 12 4 4
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
05 Feb 18-21 J 32 16 14 6
05 Feb 25-27 J 9 10 8

05 Mar 22-23 V 3 4
05 Mar 28-31 V NTV 4 4 7 9

05 Apr 1- 2 V NTV 5 3
05 Apr 8-11 J 3 3 2 11
05 Apr 25 J 8
05 Apr 27 J 1

05 May 6- 7 J 4 10
05 May 11-12 N 12 14
05 May 13-15 J 21 6 87
05 May 16 N 41
05 May 21-22 J 18 9
05 May 23-24 N 4 3
05 May 27-31 J 2 12 20 90 14

05 Jun 3- 5 J 6 22 17
05 Jun 6 NT J 10
05 Jun 7- 8 NT 13 4
05 Jun 10 N 3
05 Jun 12 N 54
05 Jun 13-17 J NTV 32 11 16 26 14
05 Jun 18 NTV 5
05 Jun 23-27 J 50 10 11 6 3

05 Jul 1- 3 J 14 12 7
05 Jul 13 J 31
05 Jul 14 N J 6
05 Jul 18-22 J 24 7 20 21 12
05 Jul 24 J 4
05 Jul 25 N J 4
05 Jul 26 N 4
05 Jul 27-31 J 14 23 17 10 8

05 Aug 1- 3 J 14 9 9
05 Aug 5- 7 J 8 29 14
05 Aug 10-13 NTV 16 3 5 16
05 Aug 15-21 J 6 14 13 12 6 3 9

112
05 Aug 22 J 9
05 Aug 24 J 102
05 Aug 26-30 J 6 5 5 7 3

05 Sep 1 NTV NTV 14


05 Sep 2- 4 J NTV NTV 39 27 24
05 Sep 5 NTV NTV 11
05 Sep 6- 8 J NTV NTV 8 10 6
05 Sep 9-12 NTV NTV 17 33 101 75
05 Sep 13-19
V NTV NTV 44 18 52 18 12 10 6
05 Sep 20-21
V NTV NTV 5 3
05 Sep 22 V J NTV NTV 6
05 Sep 23-29 J NTV NTV 6 2 5 15 12 11 7
05 Sep 30 J NTV NTV 8
------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------
OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
05 Oct 1 J 13
05 Oct 3- 5 NT 7 3 4
05 Oct 7- 9 J 12 26 10
05 Oct 12 J 2
05 Oct 20-22 N J 3 2 8
05 Oct 23 N 2
05 Oct 24-25 J 4 21
05 Oct 27 N 8
05 Oct 28 J 5
05 Oct 29 N J 3
05 Oct 30-31 J 5 17

05 Nov 1- 2 J 10 9
05 Nov 4- 7 J 20 13 14 7
05 Nov 12-14 J 12 14 9
05 Nov 15 N J 4
05 Nov 17-20 NTV 2 4 11 8
05 Nov 23-28 J 8 9 12 5 3 8

05 Dec 2 J 15
05 Dec 3- 5 N J 15 6 3
05 Dec 13-14 J 5 3
05 Dec 23-25 J 0 4 6
05 Dec 26-27 N J 6 20
05 Dec 28-31 J 18 13 8 11

06 Jan 1- 2 J 7 6
06 Jan 6-11 J 7 6 4 1 1 2
06 Jan 19-23 J 8 7 4 6 16
06 Jan 26-30 J 30 11 6 2 2

06 Feb 14-20 J 1 10 9 5 2 6 19
06 Feb 24-26 J 6 2 6

06 Mar 6-12 NTV 11 11 4 3 14 10 4


06 Mar 13-16 NTV 3 2 8 7
06 Mar 17 J NTV 3
06 Mar 18-20 N J NTV 30 38 20
06 Mar 21-27 J NTV 14 10 4 4 6 7 10
06 Mar 28 J NTV 6
06 Mar 29-31 NTV 5 4 4

06 Apr 1- 3 NTV 1 1 2
06 Apr 4- 6 J NTV 8 29 8
06 Apr 25-30 J 4 3 4 10 2 0

06 May 11-14 J 17 14 10 7
06 May 17 J 5
06 May 25-28 J 4 3 2 5

06 Jun 26-30 NTV 2 5 14 10 8

06 Jul 1 NTV 4

------------------------------------- I.S. OR H.F. RADAR OBSERVATORY ------------------------------------


OPERATING DAYS JRO ARO MU STS MLH KKF IST EIS SON/CHT ESR HHF SAN SYF SYE KGF KHF SHF GBF FHF WHF EHF ACTIVITY INDEX - Ap
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----------------------------
06 Aug 2- 3 J 9 5
06 Aug 17-22 J 5 11 38 22 12 23
06 Aug 25-28 J 2 3 16 12

06 Sep 5- 7 J 9 6 8
06 Sep 20-23 NTV 3 3 2 11

06 Oct 17-18 J 3 3
06 Oct 20-23 J 11 20 14 3

07 Jan 20-23 NTV 8 8 3 3

07 Mar 1- 6 NTV 11 4 2 4 10 18

113
Combined Daily Listing for Optical Instruments
The following listing summarizes CEDAR Database holdings for Optical Instruments. They are separated into
optical observations from altitudes less than 120 km, Fabry-Perot Interferometers (FPIs) that measure the red
line (~240 km), and 4-channel photometers that can estimate the auroral electron energy flux and the amount of
[O] in a model atmosphere. The lower observations come from FPIs that measure the green line (~97 km) or
[OH] bands (~87 km), which are also measured by many instruments. [O2] bands (~94 km) are also imaged.
Lidars measure neutral parameters between about 45 and 120 km.

SPM= South Pole, Antarctica ([OH] Michelson Interferometer)


DBM= Daytona Beach, FL, USA ([OH] Michelson Interferometer)
STM= Stockholm, Sweden ([OH] Michelson Interferometer)
SFM= Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland ([OH] Michelson Interferometer)
RBM= Resolute Bay, Canada ([OH] Michelson Interferometer)
EUM= Eureka, Canada ([OH] Michelson Interferometer)
DVS= Davis, Antarctica ([OH] Spectrophotometer)
WUP= Wuppertal, Germany ([OH] Spectrometer)
MTM= Mesospheric Temperature Mapper ([OH]/[O2] Imager in Fort Collins, CO 1997-1998; in Maui, HI
after 2001)
UIL= University of Illinois Lidar (Jan-Apr 1989 at Arecibo, PR with Na lidar; Oct 1989, Mar 1991-Aug 1992
at Urbana, IL with Fe lidar; Mar-Apr 1990 in Hawaii with Na lidar; Mar 1996-Apr 1998 in Urbana, IL with Na
Vn/Tn lidar)
CSL= Colorado State University Na Temperature Lidar
USL= Utah State University Rayleigh Temperature Lidar
PFP= Peach Mountain, MI, USA (FPI green line and [OH])
MJF= Mt John, New Zealand (FPI red line, green line and [OH] from multiple filters)
IKF= Inuvik, Canada (FPI red line < Nov 2001, then green line)
SPF= South Pole, Antarctica (FPI red line)
AHF= Arrival Heights (McMurdo/Scott Base), Antarctica (FPI red line)
HFP= Halley, Antarctica (FPI red line)
AQP= Arequipa, Peru (FPI red line; shows as being on for an entire month at a time from 1983-1990, because
the data are quiet time monthly averages)
AFP= Arecibo, Puerto Rico (FPI red line)
FPF/AAF= Fritz Peak, CO and Ann Arbor, MI USA (FPI red line)
MFP= Millstone Hill, MA, USA (FPI red line)
WFP= Watson Lake,YT, Canada (FPI red line)
CFP= College, AK, USA (FPI red line)
PKR= Poker Flat, AK, USA (ASI FPI red line)
SFP= Sondre Stromfjord, Greenland (FPI red line; green line also beginning in 2002)
RFP= Resolute Bay, Canada (FPI red line)
TFP= Thule, Greenland (FPI red line)
P4P= Poker Flat, AK, USA (4-channel photometer)
Y4P= Fort Yukon, AK, USA (4-channel photometer)

114
The significance of the symbols is as follows:

E - data related to emission


N - data related to density
T - data related to temperature
V - data related to velocities
D - ancillary Digisonde ion drift data in the CEDAR Database
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ---------------------------------
-| 4C PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
73 Feb 9 ETV

73 Apr 28 ETV

73 Aug 2 ETV

73 Sep 23 ETV

73 Oct 5 ETV

73 Dec 20 ETV

74 Jan 24-26 ETV

74 Feb 19 ETV
74 Feb 22 ETV
74 Feb 25 ETV

74 Mar 21-22 ETV

74 Apr 16 ETV
74 Apr 18 ETV
74 Apr 20 ETV

74 May 22 ETV
74 May 24 ETV
74 May 27 ETV
74 May 29 ETV

74 Jun 19 ETV
74 Jun 21 ETV
74 Jun 26 ETV
74 Jun 29-30 ETV

74 Jul 1 ETV
74 Jul 3- 8 ETV
74 Jul 20 ETV

74 Aug 14-19 ETV


74 Aug 21-22 ETV
74 Aug 24 ETV

74 Sep 18 ETV

74 Oct 15-20 ETV

74 Nov 12 ETV
74 Nov 17 ETV
74 Nov 20 ETV

74 Dec 10-11 ETV


74 Dec 13 ETV

75 Feb 16 ETV
75 Feb 19 ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
75 Mar 13 ETV
75 Mar 16 ETV

75 Apr 5- 6 ETV
75 Apr 16 ETV

75 May 14 ETV
75 May 16 ETV

75 Jun 6 ETV
75 Jun 30 ETV

75 Jul 1 ETV
75 Jul 5- 7 ETV

75 Aug 4- 5 ETV

75 Sep 1 ETV
75 Sep 3 ETV
75 Sep 6- 7 ETV

75 Oct 2- 3 ETV
75 Oct 6 ETV
75 Oct 11 ETV

75 Nov 2- 3 ETV
75 Nov 5- 7 ETV

115
75 Dec 4- 5 ETV
75 Dec 31 ETV

76 Jan 2 ETV
76 Jan 5 ETV
76 Jan 29-30 ETV

76 Feb 5 ETV
76 Feb 24-28 ETV

76 Mar 6 ETV
76 Mar 27 ETV
76 Mar 31 ETV

76 Apr 1 ETV
76 Apr 3 ETV
76 Apr 25-26 ETV

76 May 1- 3 ETV
76 May 28-29 ETV

76 Jun 1 ETV
76 Jun 3 ETV
76 Jun 25-29 ETV

76 Jul 22 ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
76 Jul 28-29 ETV

76 Aug 23 ETV
76 Aug 26 ETV
76 Aug 28-29 ETV

76 Sep 22-23 ETV


76 Sep 29-30 ETV

76 Oct 1 ETV
76 Oct 20-22 ETV
76 Oct 25 ETV
76 Oct 28-29 ETV

76 Nov 16-20 ETV


76 Nov 22 ETV
76 Nov 25 ETV

76 Dec 16 ETV
76 Dec 18-21 ETV

77 Jan 11-12 ETV


77 Jan 14 ETV
77 Jan 21 ETV

77 Feb 10-12 ETV


77 Feb 17-18 ETV
77 Feb 20 ETV

77 Mar 14 ETV
77 Mar 16 ETV
77 Mar 23 ETV

77 Apr 10 ETV
77 Apr 14 ETV
77 Apr 16 ETV

77 May 10-12 ETV


77 May 17-18 ETV

77 Jun 14-17 ETV

77 Jul 10-11 ETV


77 Jul 13 ETV
77 Jul 15-18 ETV

77 Aug 7- 9 ETV
77 Aug 12-14 ETV

77 Sep 6-10 ETV


77 Sep 14 ETV
77 Sep 20-21 ETV
77 Sep 27 ETV

77 Oct 9 ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
77 Oct 11-13 ETV
77 Oct 18-20 ETV
77 Oct 24 ETV

77 Nov 3- 6 ETV
77 Nov 8 ETV
77 Nov 10-11 ETV
77 Nov 13-14 ETV

77 Dec 6 ETV
77 Dec 9-14 ETV
77 Dec 17 ETV
77 Dec 21 ETV
77 Dec 29 ETV

78 Jan 1-15 ETV


78 Jan 17 ETV

116
78 Jan 28-31 ETV

78 Feb 1-10 ETV


78 Feb 13 ETV
78 Feb 18 ETV
78 Feb 27 ETV

78 Mar 1 ETV
78 Mar 8- 9 ETV
78 Mar 12 ETV
78 Mar 15-19 ETV
78 Mar 21 ETV
78 Mar 27 ETV
78 Mar 29-31 ETV

78 Apr 2- 8 ETV
78 Apr 11-16 ETV
78 Apr 27-28 ETV

78 May 4 ETV
78 May 9-11 ETV
78 May 13-16 ETV
78 May 19 ETV
78 May 30-31 ETV

78 Jun 3 ETV
78 Jun 5- 6 ETV
78 Jun 8-19 ETV
78 Jun 22 ETV
78 Jun 25-27 ETV
78 Jun 29-30 ETV

78 Jul 1-15 ETV


78 Jul 19-20 ETV
78 Jul 24-26 ETV
78 Jul 29-31 ETV

78 Aug 1- 2 ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
78 Aug 4 ETV
78 Aug 6-12 ETV
78 Aug 14 ETV
78 Aug 16 ETV
78 Aug 28 ETV
78 Aug 31 ETV

78 Sep 2-14 ETV


78 Sep 21-24 ETV
78 Sep 26-27 ETV
78 Sep 29-30 ETV

78 Oct 1- 3 ETV
78 Oct 5- 8 ETV
78 Oct 10 ETV
78 Oct 24 ETV
78 Oct 26-31 ETV

78 Nov 1- 4 ETV
78 Nov 6 ETV
78 Nov 8- 9 ETV
78 Nov 19-24 ETV
78 Nov 26 ETV
78 Nov 28 ETV

78 Dec 4 ETV
78 Dec 14-15 ETV
78 Dec 17-18 ETV
78 Dec 21 ETV
78 Dec 25-31 ETV

79 Jan 2- 5 ETV
79 Jan 7- 9 ETV
79 Jan 19-31 ETV

79 Feb 1- 2 ETV
79 Feb 4- 5 ETV
79 Feb 7 ETV
79 Feb 9-10 ETV
79 Feb 14-16 ETV
79 Feb 18-19 ETV
79 Feb 21-26 ETV
79 Feb 28 ETV

79 Mar 1- 2 ETV
79 Mar 4- 6 ETV
79 Mar 8 ETV
79 Mar 10-12 ETV
79 Mar 16-17 ETV
79 Mar 23 ETV
79 Mar 25-28 ETV
79 Mar 30-31 ETV

79 Apr 2 ETV
79 Apr 4- 6 ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
79 Apr 9 ETV
79 Apr 15-22 ETV
79 Apr 24-26 ETV
79 Apr 28-30 ETV

79 May 1 ETV

117
79 Jun 7 ETV
79 Jun 10-17 ETV
79 Jun 20-21 ETV
79 Jun 23-30 ETV

79 Jul 2- 3 ETV
79 Jul 6-15 ETV
79 Jul 17-23 ETV
79 Jul 25-30 ETV

79 Aug 1- 6 ETV
79 Aug 11-12 ETV
79 Aug 16-17 ETV
79 Aug 29-31 ETV

79 Sep 1- 5 ETV
79 Sep 8-11 ETV
79 Sep 15-18 ETV
79 Sep 23-26 ETV
79 Sep 28-30 ETV

79 Oct 1- 2 ETV
79 Oct 4 ETV
79 Oct 7- 8 ETV
79 Oct 10 ETV
79 Oct 13-15 ETV
79 Oct 18-19 ETV
79 Oct 22-26 ETV
79 Oct 28 ETV

79 Nov 6 ETV
79 Nov 10-11 ETV
79 Nov 13-17 ETV
79 Nov 24 ETV
79 Nov 29-30 ETV

79 Dec 1- 2 ETV
79 Dec 9 ETV
79 Dec 12-14 ETV
79 Dec 17 ETV
79 Dec 24 ETV
79 Dec 29 ETV
79 Dec 31 ETV

80 Jan 1 ETV
80 Jan 16 ETV
80 Jan 20 ETV

|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
80 Feb 6 ETV
80 Feb 9 ETV
80 Feb 10 ETV ETV
80 Feb 11 ETV
80 Feb 12-13 ETV ETV
80 Feb 14 ETV
80 Feb 28 ETV

80 Mar 2 ETV
80 Mar 10-12 ETV
80 Mar 15 ETV
80 Mar 17-19 ETV
80 Mar 21 ETV
80 Mar 24 ETV
80 Mar 26 ETV
80 Mar 30 ETV

80 Apr 8 ETV
80 Apr 13 ETV
80 Apr 14-15 ETV ETV
80 Apr 16 ETV
80 Apr 17-20 ETV ETV
80 Apr 21 ETV
80 Apr 22 ETV
80 Apr 25 ETV
80 Apr 28 ETV

80 May 10 ETV
80 May 14 ETV
80 May 16-17 ETV
80 May 19 ETV ETV
80 May 22 ETV
80 May 29-31 ETV

80 Jun 1- 6 ETV
80 Jun 7 ETV ETV
80 Jun 9 ETV
80 Jun 10 ETV ETV
80 Jun 11 ETV
80 Jun 12-15 ETV ETV
80 Jun 16-17 ETV
80 Jun 18 ETV ETV
80 Jun 20-24 ETV
80 Jun 26-27 ETV

80 Jul 3- 9 ETV
80 Jul 11-12 ETV
80 Jul 14 ETV
80 Jul 15 ETV
80 Jul 16-17 ETV ETV
80 Jul 18 ETV
80 Jul 23-26 T
80 Jul 27 T ETV
80 Jul 28 T
80 Jul 29 T ETV

118
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
80 Jul 30-31 T

80 Aug 1- 2 T
80 Aug 3- 6 T ETV
80 Aug 7 T ETV ETV
80 Aug 8 T
80 Aug 9 T ETV
80 Aug 10 T ETV
80 Aug 11 T
80 Aug 12 T ETV ETV
80 Aug 13-15 T ETV
80 Aug 16-19 T ETV
80 Aug 20 T
80 Aug 21-22 T ETV
80 Aug 23-31 T

80 Sep 1- 8 T ETV
80 Sep 9-11 T
80 Sep 12-13 T ETV
80 Sep 14 T
80 Sep 15 T ETV
80 Sep 16 T
80 Sep 17-18 T ETV
80 Sep 19-20 T
80 Sep 21 T ETV
80 Sep 22 T
80 Sep 23 T ETV
80 Sep 24-26 T
80 Sep 27-28 T ETV
80 Sep 29 T
80 Sep 30 T ETV

80 Oct 1- 5 T ETV
80 Oct 6 T
80 Oct 9-12 ETV
80 Oct 19 ETV
80 Oct 21 ETV

80 Nov 1 ETV
80 Nov 11 ETV
80 Nov 17 ETV

80 Dec 4- 6 ETV
80 Dec 8-10 ETV
80 Dec 12-14 ETV
80 Dec 18-20 ETV

81 Jan 1- 7 ETV
81 Jan 8 ETV ETV
81 Jan 9 ETV
81 Jan 10 ETV
81 Jan 11-14 ETV
81 Jan 20-22 ETV
81 Jan 25 ETV
81 Jan 27-28 ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
81 Feb 2 ETV
81 Feb 3 ETV
81 Feb 5- 6 ETV
81 Feb 8-10 ETV
81 Feb 11 ETV
81 Feb 20 ETV
81 Feb 23-28 ETV

81 Mar 5 ETV ETV


81 Mar 6 ETV
81 Mar 9 ETV
81 Mar 16 ETV
81 Mar 25 ETV
81 Mar 27 ETV
81 Mar 30 ETV ETV
81 Mar 31 ETV

81 Apr 1- 2 ETV
81 Apr 6 ETV ETV
81 Apr 10 ETV
81 Apr 12-13 ETV
81 Apr 25-26 ETV
81 Apr 30 ETV

81 May 1- 2 ETV
81 May 11 ETV
81 May 15 T ETV
81 May 16-23 T
81 May 24-25 T ETV
81 May 26-31 T

81 Jun 1- 2 T ETV
81 Jun 3- 4 T
81 Jun 5- 6 T ETV
81 Jun 7-12 T
81 Jun 13 T ETV
81 Jun 14-15 T
81 Jun 16-17 T ETV
81 Jun 18-20 T
81 Jun 21-22 T ETV
81 Jun 23-26 T ETV ETV
81 Jun 27-28 T ETV
81 Jun 29 T ETV
81 Jun 30 T

119
81 Jul 1- 4 T
81 Jul 5 T ETV
81 Jul 6- 7 T ETV
81 Jul 8-10 T
81 Jul 11 T ETV
81 Jul 12-14 T ETV
81 Jul 15-19 T
81 Jul 20 T ETV
81 Jul 21-31 T
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
81 Aug 1-19 T
81 Aug 20 T ETV
81 Aug 21-22 T
81 Aug 23 T ETV
81 Aug 24-31 T

81 Sep 1 T
81 Sep 2 T ETV
81 Sep 3- 4 T
81 Sep 5 T ETV
81 Sep 6-30 T

81 Oct 1 T
81 Oct 2 T ETV
81 Oct 3- 5 T
81 Oct 6- 8 T ETV
81 Oct 9 T
81 Oct 10 T ETV
81 Oct 11-17 T
81 Oct 18-19 T ETV
81 Oct 20 T
81 Oct 21-23 T ETV
81 Oct 24-25 T
81 Oct 26 T ETV
81 Oct 27 T
81 Oct 28-30 T ETV
81 Oct 31 T

81 Nov 1- 2 T ETV
81 Nov 3-28 T
81 Nov 29 T ETV
81 Nov 30 T

81 Dec 1- 3 T
81 Dec 4 T ETV
81 Dec 5- 6 T
81 Dec 7 T ETV
81 Dec 8 T
81 Dec 9 T ETV
81 Dec 10-17 T
81 Dec 18 T ETV
81 Dec 19-20 T
81 Dec 21-23 T ETV
81 Dec 24 T ETV ETV
81 Dec 25-28 T ETV
81 Dec 29 T ETV ETV
81 Dec 30 T
81 Dec 31 ETV

82 Jan 1 T ETV
82 Jan 2- 6 T
82 Jan 7 T ETV
82 Jan 8-13 T
82 Jan 14 T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
82 Jan 15-17 T
82 Jan 18 T ETV
82 Jan 19-27 T
82 Jan 28 T ETV
82 Jan 29 T
82 Jan 30 T ETV
82 Jan 31 T

82 Feb 1- 2 T
82 Feb 3- 4 T ETV
82 Feb 5 T
82 Feb 6- 7 T ETV
82 Feb 8-10 T
82 Feb 11-12 T ETV
82 Feb 13-22 T
82 Feb 23 T ETV
82 Feb 24 T ETV ETV
82 Feb 25 T ETV
82 Feb 26 T ETV ETV
82 Feb 27 T ETV
82 Feb 28 T ETV

82 Mar 1 T
82 Mar 2 T ETV
82 Mar 3-21 T
82 Mar 22 T ETV
82 Mar 23-26 T
82 Mar 27-29 T ETV
82 Mar 30-31 T

82 Apr 1- 9 T
82 Apr 10-11 T ETV
82 Apr 12-14 T
82 Apr 15 T ETV
82 Apr 16 T

120
82 Apr 17-18 T ETV
82 Apr 19 T
82 Apr 20 T ETV
82 Apr 21 T
82 Apr 22 T ETV
82 Apr 23 T ETV
82 Apr 24 T
82 Apr 25 T ETV
82 Apr 26-28 T
82 Apr 29 T ETV
82 Apr 30 T

82 May 1- 3 T ETV
82 May 4-14 T
82 May 15-16 T ETV
82 May 17-21 T
82 May 22 T ETV
82 May 23-26 T
82 May 27-28 T ETV
82 May 29-31 T
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
82 Jun 1- 3 T
82 Jun 4- 5 T ETV
82 Jun 6 T
82 Jun 7- 8 T ETV
82 Jun 9 T
82 Jun 10 T ETV
82 Jun 11 T
82 Jun 12 T ETV
82 Jun 13 T
82 Jun 14 T ETV
82 Jun 15 T
82 Jun 16 T ETV
82 Jun 17-23 T
82 Jun 24 T ETV
82 Jun 25-30 T

82 Jul 1 T
82 Jul 2- 4 T ETV
82 Jul 5-14 T
82 Jul 15-21 T ETV
82 Jul 22 T
82 Jul 23-25 T ETV
82 Jul 26-30 T
82 Jul 31 T ETV

82 Aug 1- 2 T ETV
82 Aug 3- 6 T
82 Aug 7- 8 T ETV
82 Aug 9 T
82 Aug 10 T ETV
82 Aug 11-14 T
82 Aug 15-19 T ETV
82 Aug 20-21 T
82 Aug 22 T ETV
82 Aug 23-28 T
82 Aug 29 T ETV
82 Aug 30-31 T

82 Sep 1 T
82 Sep 2 T ETV
82 Sep 3- 5 T
82 Sep 6 T ETV
82 Sep 7- 8 T
82 Sep 9-10 T ETV
82 Sep 11-17 T
82 Sep 18 T ETV
82 Sep 19-21 T
82 Sep 22 T ETV
82 Sep 23-28 T
82 Sep 29 T ETV
82 Sep 30 T

82 Oct 1- 6 T
82 Oct 7 T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
82 Oct 8-13 T
82 Oct 14-15 T ETV
82 Oct 16 T
82 Oct 17-18 T ETV
82 Oct 19-20 T
82 Oct 21-22 T ETV
82 Oct 23-28 T
82 Oct 29 T ETV
82 Oct 30-31 T

82 Nov 1- 2 T
82 Nov 3 T ETV
82 Nov 4- 7 T
82 Nov 8 T ETV
82 Nov 9 T
82 Nov 10 T ETV
82 Nov 11-16 T
82 Nov 17 T ETV
82 Nov 18 T ETV
82 Nov 19 T ETV ETV
82 Nov 20 T
82 Nov 21-22 T ETV
82 Nov 23 T
82 Nov 24-25 T ETV
82 Nov 26-30 T

121
82 Dec 1- 2 T
82 Dec 3 T ETV
82 Dec 4-11 T
82 Dec 12-13 T ETV
82 Dec 14-16 T
82 Dec 17 T ETV ETV
82 Dec 18 T ETV
82 Dec 19 T
82 Dec 20 T ETV
82 Dec 21 T ETV ETV
82 Dec 22 T ETV
82 Dec 23-31 T

83 Jan 1- 9 T
83 Jan 10 T ETV
83 Jan 11 T
83 Jan 12-13 T ETV
83 Jan 14-15 T
83 Jan 16 T ETV
83 Jan 17-18 T
83 Jan 19-20 T ETV
83 Jan 21-31 T

83 Feb 1- 2 T V
83 Feb 3- 5 T V ETV ETV
83 Feb 6 T V ETV ETV ETV
83 Feb 7- 8 T V ETV ETV
83 Feb 9 T V ETV
83 Feb 10-11 T V
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
83 Feb 12 T V ETV
83 Feb 13 T V
83 Feb 14-16 T V ETV
83 Feb 17 T V ETV ETV
83 Feb 18-20 T V ETV
83 Feb 21 T V ETV ETV
83 Feb 22-26 T V ETV
83 Feb 27-28 T V

83 Mar 1 T V
83 Mar 2 T V ETV
83 Mar 3- 5 T V
83 Mar 6 T V ETV
83 Mar 7- 9 T V ETV ETV ETV
83 Mar 10-11 T V ETV ETV
83 Mar 12 T V ETV ETV ETV
83 Mar 13-14 T V ETV
83 Mar 15 T V
83 Mar 16 T V ETV
83 Mar 17 T V ETV ETV
83 Mar 18 T V ETV ETV
83 Mar 19-21 T V ETV
83 Mar 22-31 T V

83 Apr 1- 3 T V
83 Apr 4 T V ETV
83 Apr 5 T V
83 Apr 6 T V ETV
83 Apr 7 T V ETV ETV
83 Apr 8 T V ETV ETV ETV
83 Apr 9-10 T V ETV
83 Apr 11 T V ETV ETV
83 Apr 12-13 T V ETV
83 Apr 14 T V
83 Apr 15-17 T V ETV
83 Apr 18 T V
83 Apr 19-22 T V ETV
83 Apr 23-24 T V
83 Apr 25 T V ETV
83 Apr 26-30 T V

83 May 1- 4 T V
83 May 5 T V ETV
83 May 6- 7 T V
83 May 8 T V ETV
83 May 9 T V
83 May 10 T V ETV
83 May 11-20 T V
83 May 21 T V ETV
83 May 22-23 T V
83 May 24-29 T V ETV
83 May 30-31 T V

83 Jun 1- 8 T V
83 Jun 9-13 T V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
83 Jun 14-16 T V
83 Jun 17-18 T V ETV
83 Jun 19-30 T V

83 Jul 1- 3 T V
83 Jul 4- 6 T V ETV
83 Jul 7 T V
83 Jul 8-14 T V ETV
83 Jul 15 T V ETV
83 Jul 16 T V
83 Jul 17-18 T V ETV
83 Jul 19-31 T V

83 Aug 1-31 T V

122
83 Sep 1- 2 T
83 Sep 3- 9 T ETV
83 Sep 10 T
83 Sep 11-16 T ETV
83 Sep 17-19 T
83 Sep 20 T ETV
83 Sep 21-27 T
83 Sep 28 T ETV
83 Sep 29-30 T

83 Oct 1 T ETV
83 Oct 2- 3 T
83 Oct 4- 6 T ETV
83 Oct 7 T ETV ETV
83 Oct 8-11 T ETV
83 Oct 12 T
83 Oct 13 T ETV
83 Oct 14-15 T
83 Oct 16 T ETV
83 Oct 17-21 T
83 Oct 22-26 T ETV
83 Oct 27-28 T
83 Oct 29 T ETV
83 Oct 30-31 T

83 Nov 1 ETV
83 Nov 3- 4 ETV
83 Nov 7 ETV
83 Nov 10 ETV
83 Nov 14-17 ETV

83 Dec 1- 2 ETV ETV


83 Dec 3- 5 ETV
83 Dec 6 ETV ETV
83 Dec 7- 8 ETV
83 Dec 9-11 ETV ETV
83 Dec 12-28 ETV
83 Dec 29-30 ETV ETV
83 Dec 31 ETV

|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
84 Jan 1- 4 ETV ETV
84 Jan 5 ETV
84 Jan 6- 8 ETV ETV
84 Jan 9 ETV
84 Jan 10 ETV ETV
84 Jan 11-15 ETV
84 Jan 16 ETV ETV
84 Jan 17-22 ETV
84 Jan 23 ETV ETV
84 Jan 24 ETV
84 Jan 25 ETV ETV
84 Jan 26-27 ETV
84 Jan 28-29 ETV ETV
84 Jan 30 ETV
84 Jan 31 ETV ETV

84 Feb 1- 4 ETV
84 Feb 5- 7 ETV ETV
84 Feb 8 ETV
84 Feb 9 ETV ETV
84 Feb 10-22 ETV
84 Feb 23 ETV ETV
84 Feb 24-26 ETV
84 Feb 27-28 ETV ETV

84 Mar 1- 7 ETV
84 Mar 8 ETV ETV
84 Mar 9-18 ETV
84 Mar 19 ETV ETV
84 Mar 20-23 ETV
84 Mar 24 ETV ETV
84 Mar 26 ETV
84 Mar 28-29 ETV

84 Apr 1 ETV
84 Apr 4 ETV
84 Apr 8 ETV
84 Apr 15-17 ETV
84 Apr 23 ETV
84 Apr 24-25 T ETV
84 Apr 26-27 T
84 Apr 28 T ETV
84 Apr 29-30 T

84 May 1- 7 T V
84 May 8 T V ETV
84 May 9-16 T V
84 May 17-24 T V ETV
84 May 25-28 T V
84 May 29-31 T V ETV

84 Jun 1- 2 T
84 Jun 3 T ETV
84 Jun 4- 7 T
84 Jun 8 T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
84 Jun 9 T
84 Jun 10 T ETV
84 Jun 11-18 T

123
84 Jun 19 T ETV
84 Jun 20-26 T
84 Jun 27 T ETV
84 Jun 28-29 T ETV ETV
84 Jun 30 T ETV

84 Jul 1 T
84 Jul 2- 3 T ETV
84 Jul 4 T
84 Jul 5- 7 T ETV
84 Jul 8-11 T
84 Jul 12 T ETV
84 Jul 13-18 T

84 Aug 1-13 V
84 Aug 14 V ETV
84 Aug 15-22 V
84 Aug 23 V ETV
84 Aug 24-25 V
84 Aug 26-29 V ETV
84 Aug 30-31 V

84 Sep 22 ETV
84 Sep 23 ETV ETV
84 Sep 24-25 ETV

84 Nov 16-21 ETV


84 Nov 23 ETV
84 Nov 25 ETV
84 Nov 27 ETV
84 Nov 29 ETV

84 Dec 1 ETV
84 Dec 6 ETV
84 Dec 19-20 ETV
84 Dec 22 ETV
84 Dec 25-30 ETV

85 Jan 2- 3 ETV
85 Jan 5 ETV
85 Jan 12-18 ETV
85 Jan 23-26 ETV

85 Feb 11 ETV
85 Feb 14-15 ETV
85 Feb 19 ETV
85 Feb 22 ETV
85 Feb 24 ETV
85 Feb 27 ETV

85 Mar 1- 2 ETV
85 Mar 14-15 ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
85 Mar 17 ETV
85 Mar 21 ETV
85 Mar 23 ETV
85 Mar 26 ETV

85 Apr 11 ETV
85 Apr 14-15 ETV
85 Apr 21 ETV

85 May 2 ETV
85 May 15 ETV
85 May 18-22 ETV
85 May 23 ETV ETV
85 May 24-25 ETV
85 May 28-29 ETV

85 Jul 13-14 ETV


85 Jul 16-18 ETV

85 Dec 4-20 ETV

86 Mar 1-21 V
86 Mar 22 V ETV
86 Mar 23 V
86 Mar 24 V ETV
86 Mar 25-26 V
86 Mar 27 V ETV
86 Mar 28-30 V
86 Mar 31 V ETV

86 Apr 1 ETV
86 Apr 3 ETV
86 Apr 8 ETV
86 Apr 12 ETV
86 Apr 23-24 ETV
86 Apr 28 ETV

86 May 4- 5 ETV
86 May 8-11 ETV

86 Jun 1- 2 V
86 Jun 3- 4 V ETV
86 Jun 5-18 V
86 Jun 19 V ETV
86 Jun 20-24 V
86 Jun 25-26 V ETV
86 Jun 27-28 V
86 Jun 29-30 V ETV

86 Jul 1- 3 V
86 Jul 4- 7 V ETV
86 Jul 8- 9 V

124
86 Jul 10 V ETV
86 Jul 11-22 V
86 Jul 23-24 V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
86 Jul 25-31 V

86 Aug 1-31 V

86 Sep 1- 2 V ETV
86 Sep 3- 8 V
86 Sep 9 V ETV
86 Sep 10-12 V
86 Sep 13 V ETV
86 Sep 14-24 V
86 Sep 25-26 V ETV
86 Sep 27-30 V

86 Oct 1- 3 V ETV
86 Oct 4- 9 V
86 Oct 10-11 V ETV
86 Oct 12-19 V
86 Oct 20 V ETV
86 Oct 21-28 V
86 Oct 29 V ETV
86 Oct 30 V ETV
86 Oct 31 V ETV ETV

86 Nov 1 V ETV ETV


86 Nov 2- 3 V ETV
86 Nov 4-30 V

86 Dec 22 ETV
86 Dec 23-24 ETV
86 Dec 26-27 ETV

87 Jan 22-25 ETV ETV


87 Jan 26-27 ETV ETV ETV
87 Jan 28-31 ETV ETV

87 Feb 1- 4 ETV ETV


87 Feb 5 ETV ETV
87 Feb 6-18 ETV
87 Feb 19-21 ETV ETV
87 Feb 22-24 ETV
87 Feb 25 ETV ETV
87 Feb 26-28 ETV

87 Mar 1- 6 ETV
87 Mar 7- 8 ETV ETV
87 Mar 9-29 ETV

87 Apr 8 ETV ETV


87 Apr 9-10 ETV
87 Apr 20-21 ETV
87 Apr 27 ETV

87 May 4- 7 ETV
87 May 9 T
87 May 10 T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
87 May 11-12 T
87 May 13-14 T ETV
87 May 15 T
87 May 16-17 T ETV
87 May 18-27 T
87 May 28 T ETV
87 May 29-31 T

87 Jun 1- 2 T
87 Jun 3 T ETV
87 Jun 4- 6 T ETV ETV
87 Jun 7- 9 T
87 Jun 10 T ETV
87 Jun 11-13 T
87 Jun 14-16 T ETV
87 Jun 17-18 T ETV ETV
87 Jun 19-20 T ETV
87 Jun 21 T
87 Jun 22-23 T ETV
87 Jun 24-25 T ETV ETV
87 Jun 26 T ETV
87 Jun 27-28 T ETV ETV
87 Jun 29-30 T

87 Jul 1-17 T
87 Jul 18 T ETV
87 Jul 19-21 T
87 Jul 22 T ETV
87 Jul 23-27 T
87 Jul 28 T ETV
87 Jul 29-30 T
87 Jul 31 T ETV

87 Aug 1-17 T
87 Aug 18 T ETV
87 Aug 19-31 T

87 Sep 1-19 T
87 Sep 20 T ETV
87 Sep 21-24 T ETV ETV
87 Sep 25 T ETV

125
87 Sep 26 T ETV ETV
87 Sep 27-30 T ETV

87 Oct 1- 6 T ETV
87 Oct 7-25 T ETV ETV
87 Oct 26-29 T ETV
87 Oct 30-31 T ETV ETV

87 Nov 1 T ETV
87 Nov 2- 4 T ETV ETV
87 Nov 5- 6 T ETV
87 Nov 7-10 T ETV ETV
87 Nov 11 T ETV ETV ETV
87 Nov 12 T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
87 Nov 13-15 T ETV
87 Nov 16 T ETV ETV
87 Nov 17-19 T ETV ETV ETV
87 Nov 20 T ETV ETV
87 Nov 21-25 T ETV ETV ETV
87 Nov 26-30 T ETV

87 Dec 1-16 T
87 Dec 17-23 T ETV
87 Dec 24-25 T
87 Dec 26-28 T ETV
87 Dec 29-31 T

88 Jan 1 T
88 Jan 5- 6 ETV
88 Jan 7-10 T ETV
88 Jan 11-24 T ETV ETV
88 Jan 25-31 T ETV

88 Feb 1-15 T ETV


88 Feb 16-17 T
88 Feb 18-29 T ETV

88 Mar 1-14 T ETV


88 Mar 15-16 T ETV ETV
88 Mar 17 T ETV
88 Mar 18-25 T ETV ETV
88 Mar 26-31 T ETV

88 Apr 1 T V ETV
88 Apr 2 T V
88 Apr 3-11 T V ETV
88 Apr 12-14 T V ETV ETV
88 Apr 15-16 T V ETV
88 Apr 17-18 T V ETV ETV
88 Apr 19 T V V ETV ETV
88 Apr 20 T V V ETV
88 Apr 21 T V ETV
88 Apr 22 T V ETV ETV
88 Apr 23 T V V ETV ETV
88 Apr 24-25 T V ETV ETV
88 Apr 26-28 T V V
88 Apr 29-30 T V

88 May 1- 2 T V
88 May 3 T V V
88 May 4- 7 T V
88 May 8 T V V
88 May 9 T V
88 May 10-17 T V V
88 May 18-19 T V
88 May 20 T V V
88 May 21-24 T V
88 May 25 T V V
88 May 26-27 T V
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
88 May 28 T V V
88 May 29 T V
88 May 30-31 T V V

88 Jun 1- 4 T V
88 Jun 5- 8 T V V
88 Jun 9-12 T V
88 Jun 13-15 T V V
88 Jun 16-17 T V
88 Jun 18-19 T V V
88 Jun 20-21 T V
88 Jun 22-30 T V V

88 Jul 1- 2 T V V
88 Jul 3- 5 T V
88 Jul 6 T V V
88 Jul 7- 8 T V V ETV
88 Jul 9 T V ETV
88 Jul 10-11 T V
88 Jul 12-13 T V V ETV
88 Jul 14-15 T V ETV
88 Jul 16-31 T V

88 Aug 1- 8 T V V
88 Aug 9-10 T V ETV
88 Aug 11-14 T V V ETV
88 Aug 15-17 T V ETV
88 Aug 18 T V
88 Aug 19 T V V ETV
88 Aug 20 T V V

126
88 Aug 21-22 T V
88 Aug 23-24 T V V
88 Aug 25-27 T V
88 Aug 28-30 T V V
88 Aug 31 T V

88 Sep 1-15 T
88 Sep 16-30 T ETV

88 Oct 1- 6 T V ETV
88 Oct 7-14 T V
88 Oct 15-31 T V ETV

88 Nov 1- 4 T V ETV
88 Nov 5- 7 T V ETV ETV
88 Nov 8-15 T V ETV
88 Nov 16 T V
88 Nov 17-21 T V ETV
88 Nov 22-27 T V
88 Nov 28-30 T V ETV

88 Dec 1 T
88 Dec 2- 5 T ETV
88 Dec 6-10 T ETV ETV
88 Dec 11-16 T ETV ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
88 Dec 17-30 T ETV ETV
88 Dec 31 ETV ETV

89 Jan 1- 4 ETV ETVD


89 Jan 5- 7 ETVD
89 Jan 8-10 ETV ETVD
89 Jan 11 T ETV ETV ETVD
89 Jan 12-15 T ETV ETVD
89 Jan 16 T ENT ETV ETVD
89 Jan 17 T ETV ETVD
89 Jan 18-21 T ENT ETVD
89 Jan 22-24 T ETVD
89 Jan 25 T ETV ETVD
89 Jan 26-27 T ETVD
89 Jan 28-31 T ETV ETVD

89 Feb 1- 2 T V ETV ETVD


89 Feb 3- 6 T V ETVD
89 Feb 7- 8 T V ETV ETV ETVD
89 Feb 9-28 T V ETV ETVD

89 Mar 1 T V ETV ETVD


89 Mar 2 T V ETVD
89 Mar 3- 6 T V ETV ETVD
89 Mar 7 T V ETV ETV ETVD
89 Mar 8-10 T ENT V ETV ETV ETVD
89 Mar 11 T ENT V ETV ETVD
89 Mar 12-13 T V ETV ETVD
89 Mar 14 T ENT V ETV ETVD
89 Mar 15-18 T V ETV ETVD
89 Mar 19-20 T V ETV
89 Mar 21-22 T ENT V ETV
89 Mar 23-24 T V ETV
89 Mar 25-26 T ENT V ETV
89 Mar 27-31 T ENT V

89 Apr 1 T ENT V
89 Apr 2- 3 T V
89 Apr 4- 8 T ENT V
89 Apr 9-10 T ENT ETV V
89 Apr 11 T ENT ETV V ETV
89 Apr 12 T ETV V ETV
89 Apr 13-15 T ENT ETV V ETV
89 Apr 16-18 T ETV V ETV
89 Apr 19 T V ETV
89 Apr 20 T ETV V ETV
89 Apr 21-22 T ETV V
89 Apr 23-30 T ETV V V

89 May 1 T ETV V
89 May 2- 3 T ETV V V
89 May 4 T ETV V
89 May 5 T ETV V ETV
89 May 6 T ETV V V
89 May 7-11 T ETV V
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
89 May 12 T ETV V V
89 May 13 T V
89 May 14 T ETV V
89 May 15 T ETV V V
89 May 16-17 T ETV V
89 May 18 T ETV V V
89 May 19-20 T ETV V V ETV
89 May 21 T ETV V V
89 May 22-23 T ETV V ETV
89 May 24 T ETV V
89 May 25-26 T ETV V V
89 May 27-30 T ETV V ETV
89 May 31 T V V

89 Jun 1- 4 T ETV V
89 Jun 5-10 T ETV V V
89 Jun 11 T V V ETV
89 Jun 12 T ETV V V ETV
89 Jun 13 T ETV V V

127
89 Jun 14 T ETV V
89 Jun 15-17 T ETV V V
89 Jun 18-21 T ETV V
89 Jun 22 T ETV V V
89 Jun 23 T ETV V V ETV
89 Jun 24 T ETV V
89 Jun 25-29 T ETV V ETV
89 Jun 30 T ETV V V ETV

89 Jul 1 T ETV V V ETV


89 Jul 2 T ETV V
89 Jul 3 T ETV V ETV
89 Jul 4- 8 T ETV V V
89 Jul 9-11 T ETV V V ETV
89 Jul 12-13 T V ETV
89 Jul 14 T ETV V
89 Jul 15 T V ETV
89 Jul 16-18 T ETV V
89 Jul 19-21 T V
89 Jul 22-24 T V V
89 Jul 25 T V V ETV
89 Jul 26-28 T ETV V V
89 Jul 29 T ETV V V ETV
89 Jul 30 T V ETV
89 Jul 31 T ETV V V ETV

89 Aug 1- 2 T ETV V ETV


89 Aug 3- 5 T ETV V
89 Aug 6 T V
89 Aug 7 T ETV V ETV
89 Aug 8 T ETV ETV
89 Aug 9 T V ETV
89 Aug 10-11 T ETV V ETV
89 Aug 12 T ETV V
89 Aug 13 T ETV V
89 Aug 14 T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
89 Aug 15 T ETV
89 Aug 16 T ETV V
89 Aug 17 T ETV V ETV
89 Aug 18 T ETV V ETV
89 Aug 19 T ETV V
89 Aug 20 T ETV
89 Aug 21 T ETV ETV
89 Aug 22 T ETV V ETV
89 Aug 23 T ETV V
89 Aug 24-26 T ETV V ETV
89 Aug 27 T ETV ETV
89 Aug 28 T ETV
89 Aug 29 T ETV ETV
89 Aug 30 T ETV
89 Aug 31 T ETV V ETV

89 Sep 1 T ETV ETV


89 Sep 2 T ETV ETV
89 Sep 3 T ETV ETV
89 Sep 4- 7 T ETV ETV ETV
89 Sep 8-11 T ETV ETV
89 Sep 12 T ETV
89 Sep 13-14 T ETV ETV
89 Sep 15-23 T ETV
89 Sep 24-27 T ETV ETV
89 Sep 28-29 T ETV
89 Sep 30 T ETV

89 Oct 1- 2 T V ETV
89 Oct 3 T V ETV ETV
89 Oct 4- 6 T V ETV ETV ETV
89 Oct 7 T V ETV ETV
89 Oct 8 T V ETV
89 Oct 9 T V ETV ETV
89 Oct 10 T V ETV ETV ETV
89 Oct 11-13 T V ETV
89 Oct 14 T V ETV ETV
89 Oct 15 T V ETV
89 Oct 16 T ENT V ETV
89 Oct 17-21 T V ETV
89 Oct 22-23 T V ETV ETV
89 Oct 24 T ENT V ETV ETV
89 Oct 25 T V ETV ETV
89 Oct 26-27 T ENT V ETV ETV
89 Oct 28-31 T V ETV ETV

89 Nov 1- 3 T V ETV
89 Nov 4- 6 T V ETV ETV
89 Nov 7-23 T V ETV
89 Nov 24-30 T V ETV ETV

89 Dec 1- 6 T V ETV
89 Dec 7- 8 T V ETV ETV
89 Dec 9-12 T V ETV
89 Dec 13-14 T V ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
89 Dec 15-16 T V ETV
89 Dec 17-25 T V ETV ETV
89 Dec 26 T V ETV
89 Dec 27-29 T V ETV ETV
89 Dec 30-31 V ETV

90 Jan 1 ETV
90 Jan 2- 5 ETV ETV

128
90 Jan 6 ETV
90 Jan 7- 8 ETV ETV
90 Jan 9-12 ETV
90 Jan 13-14 ETV ETV
90 Jan 15-16 ETV
90 Jan 17 ETV ETV
90 Jan 18 ETV
90 Jan 19-20 ETV ETV
90 Jan 21-22 ETV
90 Jan 23 ETV ETV
90 Jan 24-26 ETV
90 Jan 27-28 ETV ETV
90 Jan 29 ETV
90 Jan 30-31 ETV ETV

90 Feb 1 V ETV ETV


90 Feb 2- 5 V ETV
90 Feb 6 V ETV ETV
90 Feb 7 V ETV
90 Feb 8- 9 V ETV ETV
90 Feb 10 V ETV
90 Feb 11-13 V ETV ETV
90 Feb 14-16 V ETV
90 Feb 17-21 V ETV ETV
90 Feb 22 V ETV
90 Feb 23 V
90 Feb 24-28 V ETV ETV

90 Mar 1 V ETV ETV


90 Mar 2 T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 3- 4 T V ETV
90 Mar 5-10 T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 11-12 T V ETV
90 Mar 13-14 T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 15-17 T V ETV
90 Mar 18 T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 19 EN T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 20 T V ETV
90 Mar 21 T V ETV
90 Mar 22 EN T V ETV
90 Mar 23 T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 24 ET T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 25 ET EN T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 26 EN T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 27-29 T EN T V ETV ETV
90 Mar 30 ET T T V ETV
90 Mar 31 ET T EN T V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
90 Apr 1 ET T EN T V ETV
90 Apr 2 T T V ETV
90 Apr 3 ET T EN T V ETV
90 Apr 4 ET T T V ETV
90 Apr 5 ET T T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 6 ET T EN T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 7 ET T T V ETV
90 Apr 8 T T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 9 T EN T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 10 T T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 11-13 T T V ETV
90 Apr 14 T T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 15 T T V ETV
90 Apr 16 ET T T V ETV
90 Apr 17 ET T V V ETV ETV
90 Apr 18-20 T V V ETV ETV
90 Apr 21 T V V ETV
90 Apr 22 ET T V V ETV
90 Apr 23-25 ET T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 26 ET T V ETV
90 Apr 27-28 ET T V ETV ETV
90 Apr 29 ET T V ETV
90 Apr 30 ET T V V ETV

90 May 1- 4 ET T V V
90 May 5 ET T V
90 May 6 T V V
90 May 7- 8 ET T V V
90 May 9 T V ETV
90 May 10-11 T V V
90 May 12 T V V ETV
90 May 13-14 T V V
90 May 15 T V V ETV
90 May 16-17 T V
90 May 18-19 T V V
90 May 20 ET T V V ETV
90 May 21-23 ET T V V
90 May 24-25 ET T V V ETV
90 May 26 ET T V V
90 May 27 ET T V V ETV
90 May 28 T V V ETV
90 May 29-30 ET T V
90 May 31 ET T V V ETV

90 Jun 1 ET
T V V ETV
90 Jun 2- 3 ET
T V V
90 Jun 4 T V V
90 Jun 5- 6 T V V ETV
90 Jun 7 T V V
90 Jun 8 T V V ETV
90 Jun 9-15 T V
90 Jun 16-17 ET T V
90 Jun 18 ET T V V
90 Jun 19 T V V
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P

129
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
90 Jun 20-30 ET T V

90 Jul 1 ET T V
90 Jul 2- 3 T V
90 Jul 4- 6 T V V
90 Jul 7- 8 T V
90 Jul 9-11 T V V
90 Jul 12 T V
90 Jul 13 T V V
90 Jul 14-20 ET T V V
90 Jul 21-23 T V V ETV
90 Jul 24-25 ET T V V ETV
90 Jul 26 ET T V
90 Jul 27 ET T V ETV
90 Jul 28 ET T V
90 Jul 29 T V
90 Jul 30-31 ET T V

90 Aug 1 ET T ETV V
90 Aug 2 ET T V
90 Aug 3 T V
90 Aug 4- 8 T ETV V
90 Aug 9 T ETV V V
90 Aug 10-12 T ETV V
90 Aug 13 ET T V
90 Aug 14-18 ET T ETV V
90 Aug 19 T ETV V
90 Aug 20 ET T ETV V
90 Aug 21 ET T ETV V ETV
90 Aug 22 ET T ETV V
90 Aug 23 ET T ETV V ETV
90 Aug 24-31 ET T ETV V

90 Sep 1- 2 T ETV V
90 Sep 3 T V
90 Sep 4 T V ETV
90 Sep 5 T V
90 Sep 6- 7 T ETV V
90 Sep 8- 9 T ETV V ETV
90 Sep 10 ET T V
90 Sep 11-14 T V
90 Sep 15 ET T V ETV
90 Sep 16 T V ETV
90 Sep 17 ET T V
90 Sep 18 ET T V ETV ETV
90 Sep 19 T V ETV ETV
90 Sep 20-21 ET T V ETV ETV ETV
90 Sep 22 ET T V ETV ETV
90 Sep 23 ET T V ETV
90 Sep 24-25 ET T V ETV ETV ETV
90 Sep 26-27 ET T V ETV
90 Sep 28-29 T V
90 Sep 30 T V ETV

90 Oct 1- 5 T V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
90 Oct 6 ET T V ETV
90 Oct 7 T V ETV
90 Oct 8 ET T V ETV
90 Oct 9 ET T V ETV ETV
90 Oct 10 T V ETV ETV
90 Oct 11 T V ETV
90 Oct 12-13 T V ETV ETV
90 Oct 14 T V ETV ETV ETV
90 Oct 15-17 T V ETV ETV
90 Oct 18 T V ETV ETV ETV
90 Oct 19-22 T V ETV ETV
90 Oct 23 T V ETV
90 Oct 24-25 T V ETV ETV
90 Oct 26 T V ETV
90 Oct 27-28 T V ETV ETV
90 Oct 29-30 T V ETV
90 Oct 31 T V ETV ETV

90 Nov 1 T ETV ETV


90 Nov 2- 7 T ETV
90 Nov 8- 9 T ETV ETV
90 Nov 10-12 T ETV
90 Nov 13 T ETV ETV
90 Nov 14-15 T ETV
90 Nov 16 T ETV ETV
90 Nov 17 T ETV
90 Nov 18 T ETV ETV
90 Nov 19 T ETV ETV ETV
90 Nov 20 T ETV
90 Nov 21-22 T ETV ETV
90 Nov 23 T ETV
90 Nov 24-28 T ETV ETV
90 Nov 29 T ETV
90 Nov 30 T ETV ETV

90 Dec 1- 6 T ETV ETV


90 Dec 7- 8 T ETV
90 Dec 9-11 T ETV ETV
90 Dec 12 T ETV
90 Dec 13-15 T ETV ETV
90 Dec 16 T ETV
90 Dec 17-20 T ETV ETV
90 Dec 21-24 T ETV
90 Dec 25-27 T ETV ETV
90 Dec 28-30 T ETV
90 Dec 31 ETV

130
91 Jan 1 ETV
91 Jan 2- 5 T ETV ETV
91 Jan 6 T ETV
91 Jan 7- 8 T ETV ETV
91 Jan 9 T ETV
91 Jan 10-11 T ETV ETV
91 Jan 12-14 T ETV
91 Jan 15-16 T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
91 Jan 17 T ETV
91 Jan 18-19 T ETV ETV
91 Jan 20-21 T ETV
91 Jan 22-30 T ETV ETV
91 Jan 31 T ETV

91 Feb 1- 5 T ETV ETV


91 Feb 6- 7 T ETV
91 Feb 8 T ETV
91 Feb 9 T ETV ETV
91 Feb 10-15 T ETV
91 Feb 16-18 T ETV ETV
91 Feb 19 T ETV
91 Feb 20-22 T ETV ETV
91 Feb 23 T ETV ETV ETV
91 Feb 24 T ETV ETV
91 Feb 25-28 T T ETV

91 Mar 1 T T
91 Mar 2- 4 T T ETV
91 Mar 5 T T ETV ETV
91 Mar 6 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Mar 7- 8 T T ETV ETV
91 Mar 9 T T ETV
91 Mar 10 T T ETV ETV
91 Mar 11-12 T T ETV ETV
91 Mar 13 T T ETV
91 Mar 14 T T ETV ETV
91 Mar 15-17 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Mar 18-21 T T ETV ETV
91 Mar 22-24 T T ETV
91 Mar 25 T ENT T ETV
91 Mar 26-28 T T ETV
91 Mar 29 T ENT T ETV
91 Mar 30-31 T T ETV ETV

91 Apr 1 T T ETV
91 Apr 2- 8 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 9 T T ETV
91 Apr 10 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 11 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Apr 12 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 13 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Apr 14 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 15 T T ETV
91 Apr 16 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Apr 17 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 18 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 19 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Apr 20 T T ETV
91 Apr 21 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 22 T ENT T ETV
91 Apr 23 T T ETV ETV
91 Apr 24-26 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Apr 27 T T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
91 Apr 28-29 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Apr 30 T T ETV ETV

91 May 1 T T ETV V ETV


91 May 2 T ENT T ETV V
91 May 3- 4 T T ETV ETV
91 May 5- 6 T T ETV V ETV
91 May 7 T T ETV ETV
91 May 8 T ENT T ETV V ETV
91 May 9-10 T T ETV V ETV
91 May 11 T T V ETV
91 May 12 T T ETV
91 May 13 T T V ETV
91 May 14 T T ETV V ETV
91 May 15 T T ETV
91 May 16-17 T T ETV ETV
91 May 18 T T ETV V
91 May 19-20 T T ETV V ETV
91 May 21 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 May 22-25 T T ETV
91 May 26-29 T T ETV V
91 May 30 T T ETV ETV
91 May 31 T T ETV V

91 Jun 1- 2 T T V
91 Jun 3- 5 T T ETV
91 Jun 6 T T ETV ETV
91 Jun 7 T T ETV
91 Jun 8 T T ETV ETV
91 Jun 9 T T ETV
91 Jun 10-13 T T ETV ETV
91 Jun 14-15 T T ETV V ETV
91 Jun 16-17 T T ETV V
91 Jun 18 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Jun 19-20 T T ETV V
91 Jun 21 T T ETV V ETV

131
91 Jun 22 T T ETV
91 Jun 23 T T ETV V
91 Jun 24-25 T T ETV V ETV
91 Jun 26 T T ETV ETV
91 Jun 27 T T ETV V ETV
91 Jun 28 T T ETV ETV
91 Jun 29 T T ETV
91 Jun 30 T T ETV V

91 Jul 1 T T ETV ETV V ETV


91 Jul 2 T T ETV ETV
91 Jul 3 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Jul 4 T T ETV ETV
91 Jul 5 T ENT T ETV
91 Jul 6 T T ETV ETV
91 Jul 7- 8 T T ETV
91 Jul 9 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Jul 10 T T ETV
91 Jul 11 T T ETV V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
91 Jul 12 T T ETV V
91 Jul 13 T T ETV ETV V ETV
91 Jul 14 T ENT T ETV ETV V
91 Jul 15 T T V ETV
91 Jul 16-17 T T ETV V ETV
91 Jul 18 T T ETV
91 Jul 19 T T ETV ETV
91 Jul 20 T T ETV
91 Jul 21-22 T T V ETV
91 Jul 23 T T V
91 Jul 24 T T ETV
91 Jul 25 T ENT T ETV
91 Jul 26 T ENT T V
91 Jul 27 T T
91 Jul 28 T T V ETV
91 Jul 29-30 T T ETV
91 Jul 31 T T

91 Aug 1 T T ETV
91 Aug 2 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Aug 3 T T ETV ETV
91 Aug 4- 5 T T ETV
91 Aug 6- 7 T T ETV ETV
91 Aug 8 T T ETV
91 Aug 9 T T
91 Aug 10 T ENT T
91 Aug 11-14 T T ETV
91 Aug 15 T ENT T ETV
91 Aug 16 T T ETV
91 Aug 17-19 T T
91 Aug 20 T T ETV
91 Aug 21 T T
91 Aug 22 T ENT T
91 Aug 23 T T ETV
91 Aug 24 T T
91 Aug 25 T ENT T ETV
91 Aug 26-28 T T ETV ETV
91 Aug 29 T T ETV
91 Aug 30 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Aug 31 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV

91 Sep 1 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV


91 Sep 2 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Sep 3 T T ETV ETV
91 Sep 4 T T ETV
91 Sep 5 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
91 Sep 6 T ENT T ETV
91 Sep 7 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Sep 8 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Sep 9-10 T T ETV ETV
91 Sep 11 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Sep 12-13 T T ETV ETV
91 Sep 14-15 T T ETV
91 Sep 16-18 T T ETV ETV
91 Sep 19 T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
91 Sep 20 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Sep 21-23 T T ETV ETV
91 Sep 24 T T ETV
91 Sep 25 T T ETV ETV
91 Sep 26 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Sep 27 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Sep 28-30 T T ETV ETV

91 Oct 1 T T ETV
91 Oct 2- 3 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 4 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Oct 5 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 6 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 7 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 8 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Oct 9-11 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 12 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Oct 13 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Oct 14-15 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 16 T ENT T ETV
91 Oct 17 T T ETV
91 Oct 18-20 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 21 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Oct 22 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 23 T ENT T ETV ETV

132
91 Oct 24 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Oct 25-28 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 29-30 T T ETV ETV
91 Oct 31 T T ETV

91 Nov 1- 3 T T ETV
91 Nov 4 T T ETV ETV
91 Nov 5 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
91 Nov 6- 8 T T ETV ETV
91 Nov 9 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Nov 10-13 T T ETV
91 Nov 14 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Nov 15-18 T T ETV ETV
91 Nov 19 T T ETV ETV
91 Nov 20-21 T T ETV
91 Nov 22 T ENT T ETV
91 Nov 23-24 T T ETV
91 Nov 25 T T ETV ETV
91 Nov 26 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
91 Nov 27 T T ETV ETV
91 Nov 28 T T ETV
91 Nov 29 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Nov 30 T T ETV ETV

91 Dec 1- 2 T T ETV ETV


91 Dec 3 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 4 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 5 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 6- 7 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 8- 9 T T ETV ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
91 Dec 10 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 11 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 12 T T ETV ETV
91 Dec 13 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 14 T T ETV
91 Dec 15 T ENT T ETV
91 Dec 16-17 T ENT T ETV ETV
91 Dec 18 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 19 T T ETV ETV ETV
91 Dec 20-22 T T ETV ETV
91 Dec 23 T T ETV
91 Dec 24 T T ETV ETV
91 Dec 25 T T ETV
91 Dec 26-29 T ETV
91 Dec 30 T ETV ETV
91 Dec 31 ETV ETV

92 Jan 1 ETV ETV


92 Jan 2 ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 3 T ETV ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 4 T ETV ETV
92 Jan 5 T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 6- 8 T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 9 T ENT ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 10 T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 11 T ENT ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 12-13 T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 14 T ETV ETV
92 Jan 15 T ETV ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 16-17 T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 18 T ETV ETV
92 Jan 19 T ENT ETV ETV
92 Jan 20 T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 21-24 T ETV ETV
92 Jan 25 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 26-27 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 28-30 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jan 31 T T ETV ETV

92 Feb 1 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV


92 Feb 2- 4 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 5 T T ETV ETV
92 Feb 6 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 7 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 8 T T ETV ETV
92 Feb 9-15 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 16-18 T T ETV ETV
92 Feb 19 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 20 T T ETV ETV
92 Feb 21 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 22 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 23 T T ETV ETV
92 Feb 24-25 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Feb 26 T T ETV ETV
92 Feb 27 T ENT T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
92 Feb 28-29 T T ETV ETV ETV

92 Mar 1 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV


92 Mar 2 T T ETV ETV
92 Mar 3 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 4 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 5 T T ETV ETV
92 Mar 6- 8 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 9 T ENT T ETV ETV
92 Mar 10 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 11-12 T T ETV ETV
92 Mar 13 T ENT T ETV ETV
92 Mar 14 T T ETV ETV
92 Mar 15 T T ETV ETV ETV

133
92 Mar 16 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 17-18 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 19 T T ETV ETV
92 Mar 20-21 T T ETV ETV
92 Mar 22 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 23-24 T T ETV ETV
92 Mar 25 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 26-28 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 29 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 30 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Mar 31 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV

92 Apr 1- 4 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV


92 Apr 5 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 6 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 7 T T V ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 8 T ENT T V ETV ETV
92 Apr 9 T T V ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 10-12 T T V ETV ETV
92 Apr 13 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 14 T T V ETV ETV
92 Apr 15 T T ETV V ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 16-17 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 18 T T V ETV ETV
92 Apr 19-20 T T ETV V ETV ETV
92 Apr 21 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 22 T T ETV V ETV ETV
92 Apr 23 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 24 T T ETV V ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 25-27 T T ETV V ETV ETV
92 Apr 28 T ENT T ETV V ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 29 T T V ETV ETV ETV
92 Apr 30 T T V ETV ETV

92 May 1 ET T T V ETV
92 May 2 ET T T ETV V ETV
92 May 3 ET T T ETV ETV
92 May 4 ET T ENT T ETV ETV ETV
92 May 5 ET T T V
92 May 6 ET T T ETV ETV
92 May 7 ET T T ETV V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
92 May 8 T T ETV V
92 May 9 ET T T ETV V
92 May 10 T ENT T ETV ETV V ETV
92 May 11 ET T T ETV V
92 May 12 T T ETV V ETV
92 May 13 T T ETV V
92 May 14 T ENT T ETV ETV
92 May 15 T ENT T ETV
92 May 16 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
92 May 17 T T ETV ETV
92 May 18 ET T T ETV ETV
92 May 19 ET T T ETV V ETV
92 May 20 ET T ENT T ETV ETV
92 May 21-22 ET T T ETV V ETV
92 May 23 ET T T ETV ETV V
92 May 24 T T ETV V
92 May 25 ET T T ETV
92 May 26 T T ETV ETV V ETV
92 May 27 T ENT T ETV V
92 May 28 T T ETV V
92 May 29 ET T T ETV ETV V ETV
92 May 30 ET T T ETV ETV V ETV ETV
92 May 31 ET T T ETV ETV

92 Jun 1 T ENT T ETV


92 Jun 2 T T ETV
92 Jun 3 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jun 4- 5 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jun 6 T ENT T ETV V ETV
92 Jun 7 T T ETV
92 Jun 8- 9 T T ETV V ETV ETV
92 Jun 10 T T ETV ETV V ETV
92 Jun 11-12 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jun 13-14 T T V
92 Jun 15 T T
92 Jun 16 T T ETV
92 Jun 17 T T ETV ETV
92 Jun 18 T ENT T ETV V ETV
92 Jun 19 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jun 20-23 T T ETV V
92 Jun 24 T T ETV ETV
92 Jun 25-26 T T ETV
92 Jun 27 T T ETV V
92 Jun 28 T T ETV ETV V ETV
92 Jun 29 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jun 30 T ENT T ETV ETV ETV

92 Jul 1 T T ETV V ETV ETV


92 Jul 2- 3 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jul 4 T T ETV ETV
92 Jul 5- 6 T T ETV
92 Jul 7- 8 T T ETV ETV
92 Jul 9 T T ETV
92 Jul 10 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jul 11 T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
92 Jul 12 T T ETV ETV
92 Jul 13-15 T T ETV
92 Jul 16 T T ETV ETV

134
92 Jul 17 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Jul 18 T T ETV
92 Jul 19 T T
92 Jul 20 T T ETV ETV V
92 Jul 21 T T ETV V
92 Jul 22 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jul 23 T T ETV V
92 Jul 24 T T ETV ETV V
92 Jul 25-26 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jul 27 T T ETV
92 Jul 28-29 T T ETV V ETV
92 Jul 30 T T ETV ETV V ETV
92 Jul 31 T T ETV ETV

92 Aug 1 T ENT T ETV V


92 Aug 2- 3 T T ETV V ETV
92 Aug 4 T T ETV ETV ETV
92 Aug 5 T T ETV ETV V ETV
92 Aug 6 T T ETV V ETV
92 Aug 7 T T ETV V
92 Aug 8-10 T T ETV
92 Aug 11 T T ETV V ETV
92 Aug 12 T T ETV
92 Aug 13-16 T T ETV V
92 Aug 17 T T ETV V
92 Aug 18 T T ETV V
92 Aug 19-22 T T ETV V ETV
92 Aug 23-24 T T ETV
92 Aug 25-26 T T ETV V ETV
92 Aug 27 T T ETV
92 Aug 28-29 T T ETV V
92 Aug 30 T T ETV V ETV
92 Aug 31 T T ETV V

92 Sep 1 T T ETV V ETV


92 Sep 2 T T ETV ETV
92 Sep 3 T T ETV
92 Sep 4 T T
92 Sep 5- 6 T T ETV
92 Sep 7 T T V
92 Sep 8 T T
92 Sep 9 T T V ETV
92 Sep 10 T T ETV
92 Sep 11 T T
92 Sep 12 T T ETV ETV
92 Sep 13-14 T T ETV
92 Sep 15 T T V ETV
92 Sep 16 T T ETV V ETV
92 Sep 17 T T ETV V
92 Sep 18 T T
92 Sep 19-20 T T ETV
92 Sep 21 T T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
92 Sep 22 T T
92 Sep 23 T T ETV
92 Sep 24 T T ETV ETV
92 Sep 25 T T ETV
92 Sep 26-27 T T
92 Sep 28 T T ETV
92 Sep 29 T T ETV ETV
92 Sep 30 T T ETV

92 Oct 1- 2 T T ETV
92 Oct 3- 4 T T ETV ETV
92 Oct 5- 9 T T ETV
92 Oct 10-11 T T
92 Oct 12-13 T T ETV
92 Oct 14-16 T T
92 Oct 17-18 T T ETV
92 Oct 19-21 T T
92 Oct 22-24 T T ETV
92 Oct 25-26 T T
92 Oct 27-29 T T ETV
92 Oct 30-31 T T

92 Nov 1 T T ETV
92 Nov 2 T T ETV ETV
92 Nov 3- 4 T T
92 Nov 5 T T ETV
92 Nov 6- 7 T T ETV ETV
92 Nov 8 T T
92 Nov 9-11 T T ETV
92 Nov 12-18 T T
92 Nov 19 T T ETV
92 Nov 20-21 T T ETV ETV
92 Nov 22-23 T T ETV
92 Nov 24 T T
92 Nov 25 T T ETV
92 Nov 26-27 T T
92 Nov 28 T T ETV ETV
92 Nov 29 T T ETV
92 Nov 30 T T

92 Dec 1- 4 T T
92 Dec 5 T T ETV ETV
92 Dec 6 T T ETV
92 Dec 7 T T ETV
92 Dec 8- 9 T T ETV
92 Dec 10 T T ETV ETV
92 Dec 11-13 T T
92 Dec 14-15 T T ETV
92 Dec 16-17 T T
92 Dec 18-23 T T ETV
92 Dec 24 T T ETV ETV
92 Dec 25-28 T ETV

135
92 Dec 29-31 T

93 Jan 1 T ETV ETV


|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
93 Jan 2- 3 T ETV
93 Jan 4 T
93 Jan 5 T NT
93 Jan 6 T NT ETV
93 Jan 7- 9 T NT
93 Jan 10 T NT ETV ETV
93 Jan 11 T NT ETV
93 Jan 12-16 T NT
93 Jan 17 T NT ETV
93 Jan 18-19 T NT ETV ETV
93 Jan 20 T NT ETV ETV
93 Jan 21 T NT ETV ETV
93 Jan 22 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Jan 23-24 T NT ETV
93 Jan 25 T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Jan 26 T T ETV ETVD
93 Jan 27 T T ETV ETV ETV ETVD
93 Jan 28 T T ETV ETV ETVD
93 Jan 29-30 T T ETVD
93 Jan 31 T T ETV ETVD

93 Feb 1 T NT ETVD
93 Feb 2- 5 T NT ETV
93 Feb 6 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Feb 7- 9 T NT ETV ETV
93 Feb 10 T NT ETV
93 Feb 11-12 T NT ETV ETV
93 Feb 13 T NT ETV
93 Feb 14-15 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Feb 16 T NT ETV ETV
93 Feb 17-18 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Feb 19 T NT ETV ETV
93 Feb 20-21 T NT ETV ETV
93 Feb 22 T NT ETV ETV
93 Feb 23 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Feb 24 T NT ETV ETV
93 Feb 25-27 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Feb 28 T T ETV ETV

93 Mar 1 T T ETV ETV ETV


93 Mar 2- 3 T T ETV
93 Mar 4 T T
93 Mar 5- 6 T NT ETV
93 Mar 7- 8 T NT ETV ETV
93 Mar 9-10 T NT ETVD
93 Mar 11-12 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Mar 13 T NT ETVD
93 Mar 14-15 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Mar 16-17 T NT ETVD
93 Mar 18 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Mar 19 T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Mar 20 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Mar 21 T NT ETVD
93 Mar 22-23 T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Mar 24 T NT V ETVD
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
93 Mar 25 T T ETV V ETVD
93 Mar 26 T T ETV ETV
93 Mar 27 T T ETV V ETV
93 Mar 28 T T ETV
93 Mar 29 T T
93 Mar 30-31 T T ETVD

93 Apr 1- 2 T T ETV ETVD


93 Apr 3 T T ETVD
93 Apr 4 T T V ETV ETVD
93 Apr 5- 7 T T ETV ETVD
93 Apr 8 T T ETV ETV ETVD
93 Apr 9 T T ETV ETVD
93 Apr 10 T T ETV V ETVD
93 Apr 11 T T ETV ETV V ETVD
93 Apr 12-13 T T ETV V ETVD
93 Apr 14 T T ETV ETV V ETVD
93 Apr 15 T T V ETV ETVD
93 Apr 16-17 T T ETV V ETVD
93 Apr 18 T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Apr 19 T NT ETV V ETV ETVD
93 Apr 20-21 T NT ETV V ETVD
93 Apr 22 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Apr 23 T NT V
93 Apr 24 T NT ETV ETV V
93 Apr 25-26 T NT ETV V
93 Apr 27 T NT ETV
93 Apr 28 T NT ETV ETV V ETV
93 Apr 29 T NT ETV V ETV
93 Apr 30 T T ETV V

93 May 1 T T ETV ETV V ETV


93 May 2 T NT ETV ETV V ETV
93 May 3 T NT ETV V
93 May 4 T NT ETV V ETV
93 May 5 T NT ETV ETV
93 May 6 T NT ETV V
93 May 7- 8 T NT ETV V ETV
93 May 9-10 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 May 11-12 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 May 13 T NT ETV ETV ETV V

136
93 May 14 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV V
93 May 15 ET T NT ETV V ETV
93 May 16-17 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 May 18 ET T NT ETV V
93 May 19 ET T NT ETV
93 May 20-21 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 May 22 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 May 23-24 ET T NT ETV ETV V ETV
93 May 25 ET T NT ETV V
93 May 26 ET T NT ETV V ETV
93 May 27 ET T NT ETV ETV V ETV
93 May 28 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV V
93 May 29 ET T NT ETV V
93 May 30 ET T NT ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
93 May 31 ET T T ETV ETV

93 Jun 1 ET T T
93 Jun 2 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Jun 3 ET T T ETV
93 Jun 4 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Jun 5 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Jun 6 ET T T ETV
93 Jun 7- 8 ET T T ETV V ETV
93 Jun 9 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Jun 10 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Jun 11 T NT ETV ETV V
93 Jun 12 T NT ETV V
93 Jun 13-14 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Jun 15 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Jun 16-17 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Jun 18-20 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Jun 21 T T ETV ETV
93 Jun 22 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Jun 23 ET T T ETV V
93 Jun 24-28 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Jun 29 ET T T ETV ETV ETV V
93 Jun 30 ET T T ETV ETV V

93 Jul 1- 2 ET T T ETV ETV ETV V


93 Jul 3 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Jul 4 ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
93 Jul 5 ET T T ETV ETV V ETV
93 Jul 6 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Jul 7 ET T T ETV ETV V ETV
93 Jul 8 ET T T ETV ETV ETV V
93 Jul 9 ET T T ETV ETV ETV V ETV
93 Jul 10 ET T NT ETV V ETV
93 Jul 11 ET T NT ETV V
93 Jul 12 ET T NT ETV V ETV
93 Jul 13 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 Jul 14 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Jul 15 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV V
93 Jul 16 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Jul 17-18 ET T NT ETV ETV V ETV
93 Jul 19-20 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Jul 21 ET T NT ETV ETV V ETV
93 Jul 22 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV V
93 Jul 23 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 Jul 24 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV V
93 Jul 25-26 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Jul 27 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Jul 28 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Jul 29 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Jul 30 ET T T ETV ETV ETV V
93 Jul 31 T T ETV ETV

93 Aug 1- 3 ET T T ETV ETV


93 Aug 4- 5 ET T T ETV ETV ETV V
93 Aug 6 ET T T ETV ETV ETV V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
93 Aug 7 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV V
93 Aug 8 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Aug 9 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 Aug 10 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Aug 11 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Aug 12 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Aug 13-14 T NT ETV ETV V
93 Aug 15 T NT ETV ETV
93 Aug 16-18 T NT ETV ETV V
93 Aug 19-20 ET T NT ETV ETV V
93 Aug 21 T NT ETV ETV V
93 Aug 22 ET T NT ETV V
93 Aug 23 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 Aug 24 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Aug 25 T NT ETV ETV
93 Aug 26 T NT ETV ETV
93 Aug 27 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Aug 28 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Aug 29 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Aug 30 T NT ETV ETV
93 Aug 31 ET T NT ETV ETV

93 Sep 1 ET T T ETV ETV V


93 Sep 2 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Sep 3 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Sep 4- 5 ET T T ETV V
93 Sep 6- 7 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Sep 8 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Sep 9-11 ET T NT ETV V
93 Sep 12 ET T T ETV V ETV

137
93 Sep 13 ET T T ETV ETV V ETV
93 Sep 14 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Sep 15 T T ETV ETV V
93 Sep 16 ET T T ETV ETV V
93 Sep 17-21 ET T T ETV V
93 Sep 22 ET T T ETV
93 Sep 23 ET T T
93 Sep 24 ET T T ETV
93 Sep 25-26 ET T T ETV
93 Sep 27-28 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Sep 29 ET T T ETV
93 Sep 30 ET T T ETV ETV

93 Oct 1 ET T T
93 Oct 2 ET T T ETV
93 Oct 3 ET T NT ETV
93 Oct 4 T NT ETV
93 Oct 5 ET T NT
93 Oct 6 ET T NT ETV
93 Oct 7 T NT ETV ETV
93 Oct 8 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Oct 9 T NT ETV
93 Oct 10-11 T NT ETV ETV
93 Oct 12 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Oct 13-14 T NT ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
93 Oct 15 T NT ETV ETV
93 Oct 16 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Oct 17 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Oct 18-19 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 Oct 20 ET T NT ETV
93 Oct 21 T NT ETV ETV
93 Oct 22-23 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Oct 24 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 Oct 25 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Oct 26 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Oct 27 ET T T ETV
93 Oct 28-29 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Oct 30-31 ET T T ETV

93 Nov 1 ET T T ETV
93 Nov 2 ET T T ETV ETV
93 Nov 3 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Nov 4 T T ETV ETV
93 Nov 5 T T ETV ETV
93 Nov 6 T T ETV
93 Nov 7 T T ETV ETV
93 Nov 8 T NT ETV ETV
93 Nov 9 T NT ETV
93 Nov 10-12 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Nov 13 ET T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Nov 14 ET T NT ETV ETVD
93 Nov 15 ET T NT ETVD
93 Nov 16 ET T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Nov 17 ET T NT ETV ETVD
93 Nov 18-21 T T ETV ETVD
93 Nov 22-24 T T ETV ETVD
93 Nov 25 T T ETV ETV ETVD
93 Nov 26 T T ETV ETV ETV
93 Nov 27-29 T T ETV ETV
93 Nov 30 T T ETV ETV ETV

93 Dec 1- 2 T T ETV ETV ETVD


93 Dec 3 T T ETV ETVD
93 Dec 4 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Dec 5- 6 ET T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 7 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Dec 8 T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 9 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 10 ET T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 11 T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 12 T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Dec 13 ET T NT ETV ETV ETV
93 Dec 14 ET T NT ETV ETV
93 Dec 15 T NT ETV ETV
93 Dec 16-17 ET T NT ETV ETVD
93 Dec 18 T NT ETV ETVD
93 Dec 19 T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 20 ET T NT ETV ETVD
93 Dec 21 ET T NT ETVD
93 Dec 22 ET T NT ETV ETVD
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
93 Dec 23 ET T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 24 ET T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 25 ET T NT ETV ETVD
93 Dec 26-27 T NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 28-29 NT ETV ETV ETVD
93 Dec 30-31 ETV ETV ETVD

94 Jan 1 ETV ETV


94 Jan 2 T
94 Jan 3- 8 T ETV
94 Jan 9 T ETV ETV ETV
94 Jan 10 ET T ETV ETV
94 Jan 11 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jan 12 T T ETV ETV
94 Jan 13-14 T T ETV
94 Jan 15-16 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jan 17-18 ET T T ETV
94 Jan 19 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jan 20-21 T T ETV ETV

138
94 Jan 22-25 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jan 26-27 T T ETV
94 Jan 28 ET T T
94 Jan 29-30 ET T T ETV
94 Jan 31 T T ETV ETV

94 Feb 1 ET T T ETV ETV


94 Feb 2- 3 T T ETV ETV
94 Feb 4 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Feb 5 ET T T ETV
94 Feb 6- 8 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Feb 9-13 T T ETV ETV
94 Feb 14-15 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Feb 16 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Feb 17-18 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Feb 19-20 T T ETV ETV
94 Feb 21 T T ETV ETV
94 Feb 22-23 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Feb 24 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Feb 25-26 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Feb 27 ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Feb 28 ET T T ETV ETV ETV

94 Mar 1 ET T T ETV ETV ETV


94 Mar 2 ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 3 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 4 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 5 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 6 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Mar 7 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Mar 8 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Mar 9 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Mar 10 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 11 ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 12 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 13 T T ETV ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
94 Mar 14 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 15-16 T T ETV V ETV ETV
94 Mar 17 T T ETV ETV V ETV ETV
94 Mar 18-19 T T ETV V ETV ETV
94 Mar 20 T T ETV ETV V ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 21 T T ETV ETV V ETV ETV
94 Mar 22 T T ETV ETV V ETV
94 Mar 23 T T ETV V ETV ETV
94 Mar 24 T T ETV V ETV
94 Mar 25 T T ETV V ETV
94 Mar 26 T T ETV ETV V ETV
94 Mar 27-29 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Mar 30-31 T T ETV ETV V ETV ETV

94 Apr 1 ET T T ETV
94 Apr 2 ET T T V
94 Apr 3 ET T T ETV V
94 Apr 4 ET T T V ETV
94 Apr 5 ET T T V ETV ETV
94 Apr 6- 7 ET T T ETV V ETV
94 Apr 8 T T V ETV ETV
94 Apr 9 ET T T ETV ETV V ETV ETV
94 Apr 10 ET T T ETV V ETV
94 Apr 11 ET T T ETV ETV V ETV ETV
94 Apr 12 ET T T V ETV
94 Apr 13 ET T T ETV V ETV
94 Apr 14-16 ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 17 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 18 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Apr 19 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 20 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Apr 21 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 22 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 23 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 24 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 25 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 26 T T ETV ETV
94 Apr 27 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 28 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Apr 29 T T ETV ETV
94 Apr 30 T T

94 May 1 T T
94 May 2 ET T T
94 May 3 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 May 4- 5 ET ET T T ETV
94 May 6- 7 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 May 8- 9 ET ET T T
94 May 10-11 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 May 12 ET ET T T ETV
94 May 13 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 May 14 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 May 15 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
94 May 16 ET T T ETV ETV V
94 May 17 ET T T ETV V
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
94 May 18 ET T T ETV
94 May 19-20 ET ET T T ETV V
94 May 21 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
94 May 22 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 May 23-24 ET T T ETV
94 May 25-27 ET T T ETV
94 May 28 ET T T ETV V ETV
94 May 29 T T ETV V ETV

139
94 May 30 ET T T ETV V ETV
94 May 31 ET T T ETV ETV

94 Jun 1 ET ET T T ETV V ETV


94 Jun 2 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jun 3 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jun 4 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Jun 5 ET ET T T ETV
94 Jun 6 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jun 7 ET ET T T ETV
94 Jun 8 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jun 9-11 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
94 Jun 12-13 ET ET T T ETV V
94 Jun 14 ET ET T T ETV
94 Jun 15-17 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jun 18 ET T T ETV V
94 Jun 19 ET T T V
94 Jun 20 ET T T ETV V
94 Jun 21-24 T T ETV
94 Jun 25-28 ET T T ETV
94 Jun 29 T T ETV V
94 Jun 30 ET T T ETV

94 Jul 1 ET ET T T ETV
94 Jul 2 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Jul 3 ET ET T T ETV
94 Jul 4 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
94 Jul 5 ET ET T T ETV V
94 Jul 6- 9 ET ET T T ETV
94 Jul 10-12 ET ET T T ETV V
94 Jul 13 ET ET T T ETV ETV V
94 Jul 14-18 ET ET T T ETV V
94 Jul 19 ET T T ETV V
94 Jul 20-23 ET T T ETV
94 Jul 24 ET T T ETV ETV V
94 Jul 25 ET T T V
94 Jul 26-28 ET T T ETV V
94 Jul 29-30 ET T T ETV ETV V
94 Jul 31 ET T T ETV

94 Aug 1- 6 ET T T ETV V
94 Aug 7 ET T T ETV V ETV
94 Aug 8 ET T T ETV
94 Aug 9 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 10-11 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 12-14 ET T T ETV
94 Aug 15 ET T T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
94 Aug 16 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 17 ET T T ETV
94 Aug 18-19 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 20 T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 21 T T ETV
94 Aug 22 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 23 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Aug 24 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Aug 25 ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Aug 26 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Aug 27 T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 28 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Aug 29 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Aug 30 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Aug 31 ET T T ETV ETV ETV

94 Sep 1 ET T T ETV ETV


94 Sep 2 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Sep 3 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Sep 4 T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
94 Sep 5 T T ETV V ETV
94 Sep 6- 7 ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
94 Sep 8-10 ET T T V ETV ETV
94 Sep 11-13 ET T T ETV
94 Sep 14-16 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Sep 17 T T ETV
94 Sep 18-19 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Sep 20-21 T T ETV ETV
94 Sep 22-25 ET T T ETV
94 Sep 26-27 T T ETV
94 Sep 28 ET T T ETV
94 Sep 29 T T ETV
94 Sep 30 T T ETV ETV

94 Oct 1 T T ETV ETV


94 Oct 2 T T ETV
94 Oct 3- 4 T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 5- 6 T T ETV
94 Oct 7- 8 T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 9-13 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 14 ET T T ETV
94 Oct 15-17 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 18 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 19 ET T T ETV
94 Oct 20-22 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 23 T T ETV
94 Oct 24 T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 25-26 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Oct 27 ET T T ETV
94 Oct 28 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 29-30 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Oct 31 ET T T ETV ETV

94 Nov 1 ET T T ETV ETV


94 Nov 2 ET ET T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM

140
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
94 Nov 3 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 4- 5 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 6- 7 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 8 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 9 ET T T ETV
94 Nov 10-13 ET ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 14-16 ET T T ETV
94 Nov 17-21 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 22 ET T T ETV
94 Nov 23 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 24 ET T T ETV
94 Nov 25-27 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 28 ET T T ETV
94 Nov 29 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Nov 30 ET T T ETV

94 Dec 1- 3 ET T T ETV
94 Dec 4 T T ETV
94 Dec 5 T T
94 Dec 6 T T ETV ETV
94 Dec 7 ET T T
94 Dec 8 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Dec 9 T T ETV ETV
94 Dec 10-11 ET T T ETV
94 Dec 12 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Dec 13 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Dec 14-15 ET T T ETV
94 Dec 16 ET T T ETV ETV
94 Dec 17-18 ET T T ETV
94 Dec 19 T T ETV ETV
94 Dec 20 T T ETV ETV ETV
94 Dec 21 T ETV ETV
94 Dec 22 ET T ETV ETV
94 Dec 23 ET T ETV ETV
94 Dec 24 ET T ETV
94 Dec 25-26 ET T ETV ETV ETV
94 Dec 27 ET ETV
94 Dec 28-29 ETV
94 Dec 30 ETV ETV ETV
94 Dec 31 ET ETV ETV

95 Jan 1 ET NT ETV
95 Jan 2- 3 NT ETV
95 Jan 4 NT ETV ETV
95 Jan 5- 7 T NT ETV
95 Jan 8-11 T NT ETV ETV
95 Jan 12-23 T NT ETV
95 Jan 24 T NT ETV ETV
95 Jan 25 T NT ETV
95 Jan 26-31 T NT ETV ETV

95 Feb 1- 3 T NT ETV ETV


95 Feb 4- 5 T NT ETV
95 Feb 6- 7 T NT ETV ETV
95 Feb 8-16 T NT ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
95 Feb 17-19 T NT ETV ETV
95 Feb 20-25 T NT ETV
95 Feb 26-27 T NT ETV ETV
95 Feb 28 ET T NT ETV

95 Mar 1 ET T NT ETV
95 Mar 2 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Mar 3 ET T NT ETV
95 Mar 4- 7 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Mar 8 ET T NT ETV
95 Mar 9-10 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Mar 11-12 ET T NT
95 Mar 13-14 ET T NT ETV
95 Mar 15-16 ET T NT
95 Mar 17-25 ET T NT ETV
95 Mar 26-29 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Mar 30-31 ET T NT ETV

95 Apr 1- 4 ET T NT ETV
95 Apr 5 ET T NT V ETV
95 Apr 6 ET T NT ETV
95 Apr 7- 9 ET T NT V ETV
95 Apr 10-11 ET ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Apr 12 ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Apr 13 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Apr 14-15 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Apr 16 ET T NT ETV
95 Apr 17-18 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Apr 19-20 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Apr 21-30 ET ET T NT ETV V ETV

95 May 1 ET T NT ETV V ETV


95 May 2 ET T NT ETV V ETV ETV
95 May 3 ET T NT ETV V
95 May 4 ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 May 5 ET T NT V
95 May 6- 7 ET T NT ETV V
95 May 8- 9 ET T NT ETV
95 May 10 ET T NT ETV V
95 May 11-13 ET T NT ETV
95 May 14 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 May 15-16 ET T NT ETV
95 May 17 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 May 18-20 ET T NT ETV
95 May 21 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 May 22 T NT ETV

141
95 May 23-24 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 May 25-27 ET T NT ETV
95 May 28 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 May 29-30 ET T NT ETV
95 May 31 ET T NT ETV ETV

95 Jun 1- 2 ET ET T NT ETV ETV


95 Jun 3 ET T NT ETV
95 Jun 4 ET ET T NT
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
95 Jun 5 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jun 6- 7 ET ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Jun 8 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jun 9 ET ET T NT
95 Jun 10-12 ET ET T NT ETV
95 Jun 13 ET ET T NT
95 Jun 14-15 ET ET T NT ETV
95 Jun 16 ET ET T NT ETV V
95 Jun 17-18 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jun 19-20 ET ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Jun 21-23 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jun 24-27 ET ET T NT ETV
95 Jun 28 ET ET T NT
95 Jun 29 ET ET T NT ETV
95 Jun 30 ET ET T NT ETV V

95 Jul 1 ET T NT V
95 Jul 2- 3 ET ET T NT ETV V
95 Jul 4- 6 ET ET T NT ETV
95 Jul 7- 8 ET ET T NT ETV V
95 Jul 9 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jul 10-12 ET ET T NT ETV
95 Jul 13-16 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jul 17-18 ET ET T NT ETV V
95 Jul 19 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jul 20-22 ET ET T NT ETV
95 Jul 23 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jul 24-25 ET ET T NT ETV V
95 Jul 26 ET ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Jul 27-31 ET ET T NT ETV

95 Aug 1- 2 ET ET T NT ETV V ETV


95 Aug 3 ET T NT ETV V
95 Aug 4 ET T NT ETV
95 Aug 5 ET T NT ETV V
95 Aug 6 ET T NT ETV
95 Aug 7 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Aug 8-10 ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Aug 11 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Aug 12-16 ET T NT ETV
95 Aug 17-19 ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Aug 20-21 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Aug 22 ET T NT ETV
95 Aug 23-25 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Aug 26 ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Aug 27 ET T NT ETV V
95 Aug 28 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Aug 29 ET T NT ETV V ETV
95 Aug 30-31 ET T NT ETV ETV

95 Sep 1- 2 ET T NT ETV
95 Sep 3- 7 ET T NT ETV ETV
95 Sep 8-12 ET T NT
95 Sep 13 ET T NT V
95 Sep 14-22 ET T NT
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
95 Sep 23-24 ET T NT ETV
95 Sep 25-26 ET T NT
95 Sep 27-30 ET T NT ETV

95 Oct 1- 2 ET T NT ETV
95 Oct 3- 6 ET T NT
95 Oct 7 T NT
95 Oct 8-19 ET T NT ETV
95 Oct 20-21 ET T NT
95 Oct 22-23 ET T NT ETV
95 Oct 24 ET T NT
95 Oct 25 T NT
95 Oct 26-27 T NT ETV
95 Oct 28-30 T NT
95 Oct 31 T NT ETV

95 Nov 1- 7 T NT
95 Nov 8- 9 T NT ETV
95 Nov 10-16 T NT
95 Nov 17-18 T NT ETV
95 Nov 19-21 T NT
95 Nov 22-25 T NT ETV
95 Nov 26-29 T NT
95 Nov 30 T NT ETV

95 Dec 1- 3 T NT
95 Dec 4- 5 T NT ETV
95 Dec 6 T NT
95 Dec 7- 8 T NT ETV
95 Dec 9 T NT
95 Dec 10-12 T NT ETV
95 Dec 13-21 T NT
95 Dec 22-23 T NT ETV
95 Dec 24-31 T NT

142
96 Jan 5-12 T
96 Jan 13-18 T T
96 Jan 19-20 T T ETV
96 Jan 21-26 T T
96 Jan 27-29 T T ETV
96 Jan 30-31 T T

96 Feb 1- 5 T T
96 Feb 6- 7 T T ETV
96 Feb 8 T T
96 Feb 9-10 T ENTV T
96 Feb 11 T T
96 Feb 12-13 T T ETV
96 Feb 14-15 T T
96 Feb 16 T ENTV T
96 Feb 17-18 T ENTV T ETV
96 Feb 19 T T ETV
96 Feb 20 T T
96 Feb 21 T T ETV
96 Feb 22 T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
96 Feb 23-24 T ENTV T ETV ETV
96 Feb 25-26 T T ETV ETV ETV
96 Feb 27 T T ETV
96 Feb 28-29 T T

96 Mar 1 T T ETV
96 Mar 2 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Mar 3- 5 ET T T
96 Mar 6- 7 ET T T ETV
96 Mar 8 ET T T ETV
96 Mar 9-10 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Mar 11 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Mar 12 ET T T ETV
96 Mar 13 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Mar 14 ET T T ETV
96 Mar 15 ET T T
96 Mar 16 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Mar 17-21 ET T T ETV
96 Mar 22 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Mar 23 ET T ENTV T
96 Mar 24 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Mar 25 ET T T ETV
96 Mar 26 ET T ENTV T
96 Mar 27 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Mar 28-29 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Mar 30-31 ET T T ETV

96 Apr 1 ET T T
96 Apr 2- 4 ET T T ETV
96 Apr 5- 9 ET T T
96 Apr 10 T ENTV T ETV
96 Apr 11 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Apr 12-16 ET T T ETV
96 Apr 17 ET T ENTV T ETV ETV
96 Apr 18 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Apr 19 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
96 Apr 20 ET T T ETV ETV ETV ETV
96 Apr 21 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
96 Apr 22 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Apr 23 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
96 Apr 24 ET T ENTV T ETV ETV
96 Apr 25-28 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Apr 29-30 ET T T ETV

96 May 1 ET T T
96 May 2 ET T T V
96 May 3- 4 ET T T
96 May 5 ET T T ETV
96 May 6- 8 ET T T V ETV
96 May 9 ET ET T T ETV
96 May 10-11 ET ET T T V ETV
96 May 12 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
96 May 13 ET ET T T V ETV
96 May 14-15 ET ET T T ETV
96 May 16 ET T T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
96 May 17 ET ET T T ETV ETV
96 May 18 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
96 May 19-20 ET ET T T V ETV
96 May 21 ET ET T T ETV
96 May 22-24 ET ET T T V ETV
96 May 25 ET T T V ETV
96 May 26-28 ET ET T T V ETV
96 May 29-30 ET ET T T
96 May 31 ET T T

96 Jun 1 ET ET T T
96 Jun 2- 3 ET ET T T V
96 Jun 4 ET T T V
96 Jun 5 T T V ETV
96 Jun 6 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
96 Jun 7 ET T T V ETV
96 Jun 8- 9 ET T T V ETV
96 Jun 10 ET ET T T V ETV
96 Jun 11-12 ET ET T T ETV
96 Jun 13 ET ET T T ETV ETV
96 Jun 14 ET ET T T ETV
96 Jun 15 ET ET T ENTV T
96 Jun 16 ET ET T T
96 Jun 17-18 ET ET T T ETV ETV

143
96 Jun 19 ET T T ETV
96 Jun 20-24 ET ET T T ETV
96 Jun 25-26 ET ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Jun 27 ET T ENTV T
96 Jun 28 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Jun 29-30 ET T T ETV

96 Jul 1- 4 ET T T ETV
96 Jul 5 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Jul 6 ET T T ETV
96 Jul 7 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Jul 8-11 ET T T ETV
96 Jul 12 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Jul 13 ET T T
96 Jul 14-18 ET T T ETV
96 Jul 19 T T ETV
96 Jul 20 ET T T ETV
96 Jul 21-22 ET ET T T ETV
96 Jul 23 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
96 Jul 24-26 ET ET T T ETV ETV
96 Jul 27-29 ET ET T T ETV
96 Jul 30 ET T T ETV
96 Jul 31 ET ET T T ETV

96 Aug 1- 2 ET ET T T ETV
96 Aug 3- 6 ET T T ETV
96 Aug 7 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Aug 8 ET T T ETV
96 Aug 9-10 ET T ENTV T ETV ETV
96 Aug 11 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
96 Aug 12 ET T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
96 Aug 13-14 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Aug 15-16 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Aug 17-21 ET T T ETV
96 Aug 22 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Aug 23-24 ET T T ETV
96 Aug 25 ET T ENTV T
96 Aug 26 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Aug 27-29 ET T T ETV
96 Aug 30-31 ET T T ETV

96 Sep 1 ET T T ETV ETV


96 Sep 2- 9 ET T T ETV
96 Sep 10-11 ET T ENTV T
96 Sep 12 ET T T
96 Sep 13-15 ET T ENTV T
96 Sep 16-18 ET T T
96 Sep 19-21 T T
96 Sep 22 ET T T
96 Sep 23-26 T T
96 Sep 27-28 ET T T
96 Sep 29 ET T ENTV T
96 Sep 30 ET T ENTV T ETV

96 Oct 1- 2 ET T ENTV T ETV


96 Oct 3- 4 ET T ENTV T ETV ETV
96 Oct 5 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Oct 6 ET T T ETV
96 Oct 7- 8 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Oct 9 ET T T ETV
96 Oct 10 ET T T
96 Oct 11 ET T T ETV
96 Oct 12 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Oct 13-14 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Oct 15-16 ET T T ETV
96 Oct 17 T T ETV ETV
96 Oct 18 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Oct 19 ET T T ETV
96 Oct 20 T T ETV
96 Oct 21 ET T T ETV
96 Oct 22 ET T T
96 Oct 23-24 T T
96 Oct 25 T T ETV
96 Oct 26-27 ET T T ETV
96 Oct 28-30 ET T T
96 Oct 31 ET T T ETV

96 Nov 1- 2 ET T T ETV
96 Nov 3 ET T T
96 Nov 4- 5 ET T T ETV
96 Nov 6-10 ET T T
96 Nov 11 ET T T ETV
96 Nov 12-15 ET T T ETV
96 Nov 16 ET T T ETV ETV
96 Nov 17-18 ET T T ETV
96 Nov 19-25 ET T T
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
96 Nov 26 ET T ENTV T
96 Nov 27 ET T ENTV T ETV
96 Nov 28-30 ET T T ETV

96 Dec 1-20 ET T T
96 Dec 21-24 ET T
96 Dec 25-26 ET T ETV
96 Dec 27 ET T
96 Dec 28-31 T

97 Jan 1- 2 T NTV
97 Jan 3- 5 T
97 Jan 6- 7 T ENTV ETV

144
97 Jan 8- 9 T NTV ETV
97 Jan 10 T
97 Jan 11-14 T ETV
97 Jan 15-16 T NTV
97 Jan 17-18 T
97 Jan 19 T T
97 Jan 20-21 T T ETV
97 Jan 22 T NTV T
97 Jan 23 T NTV T ETV
97 Jan 24 T T ETV
97 Jan 25-27 T T
97 Jan 28-29 T ENTV T ETV
97 Jan 30 T NTV T
97 Jan 31 T T

97 Feb 1- 2 T T
97 Feb 3- 4 T T ETV
97 Feb 5- 6 T NTV T
97 Feb 7-11 T T
97 Feb 12-13 T NTV T
97 Feb 14 T T
97 Feb 15-16 T NTV T
97 Feb 17-18 T T
97 Feb 19-20 T NTV T
97 Feb 21-23 T T
97 Feb 24-25 T T ETV
97 Feb 26 T NTV T
97 Feb 27 T NTV T ETV
97 Feb 28 T T ETV

97 Mar 1- 2 T T
97 Mar 3- 4 ET T T
97 Mar 5- 6 T NTV T
97 Mar 7 T ENTV T ETV
97 Mar 8 ET T T ETV ETV
97 Mar 9-11 T T
97 Mar 12-13 ET T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Mar 14 ET T T ETV ETV
97 Mar 15-16 ET T NTV T ETV
97 Mar 17-18 ET T T ETV ETV
97 Mar 19-20 ET T NTV T
97 Mar 21-22 ET T T
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
97 Mar 23-25 ET T T ETV
97 Mar 26-27 ET T NTV T ETV
97 Mar 28 ET T T ETV
97 Mar 29-31 ET T T

97 Apr 1 ET T T
97 Apr 2- 3 ET T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Apr 4- 5 ET T T ETV ETV
97 Apr 6 ET T T ETV
97 Apr 7- 8 ET T T ETV ETV
97 Apr 9-10 ET T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Apr 11 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
97 Apr 12-13 ET T T ETV ETV
97 Apr 14 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
97 Apr 15-16 ET ET T NTV T ETV ETV ETV
97 Apr 17 ET ET T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Apr 18-19 ET ET T T ETV ETV
97 Apr 20-21 ET ET T T
97 Apr 22 ET ET T T ETV
97 Apr 23-24 ET ET T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Apr 25 ET ET T T ETV ETV
97 Apr 26-27 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
97 Apr 28 ET ET T T ETV ETV
97 Apr 29 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
97 Apr 30 ET ET T NTV T ETV ETV ETV

97 May 1 ET ET T ENTV T ETV ETV ETV


97 May 2 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
97 May 3 ET ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 4 ET ET T ENTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 5 ET ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 6 ET ET T ENTV T ETV V ETV
97 May 7 ET ET T NTV T ETV ETV
97 May 8 ET ET T NTV T ETV ETV ETV
97 May 9 ET ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 10 ET ET T ENTV T ETV V ETV
97 May 11 ET ET T ENTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 12 ET ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 13 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
97 May 14 ET ET T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 May 15-16 ET ET T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 17-19 ET ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 20 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
97 May 21 ET ET T ENTV T ETV ETV
97 May 22 ET T ENTV T ETV ETV
97 May 23-25 ET ET T T ETV V
97 May 26 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
97 May 27 ET ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 28-29 ET ET T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 May 30 ET T T ETV ETV
97 May 31 ET ET T T ETV V ETV

97 Jun 1- 3 ET ET T T ETV V
97 Jun 4- 5 ET ET T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jun 6- 9 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
97 Jun 10 ET ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jun 11 ET ET T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV

145
97 Jun 12 ET ET T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jun 13-14 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
97 Jun 15-16 ET ET T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jun 17 ET ET T T ETV V
97 Jun 18 ET ET T NTV T ETV
97 Jun 19 ET ET T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Jun 20 ET ET T T ETV ETV
97 Jun 21 ET ET T T ETV
97 Jun 22 ET ET T T ETV ETV
97 Jun 23 ET ET T ENTV T ETV ETV
97 Jun 24 ET ET T ENTV T ETV
97 Jun 25-26 ET ET T NTV T ETV V
97 Jun 27-29 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
97 Jun 30 ET ET T T T ETV ETV ETV

97 Jul 1 ET ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV


97 Jul 2 ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jul 3 ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 4- 5 ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 6- 8 ET ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 9 ET ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 10 ET ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 11 ET ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jul 12 ET ET T T T ETV ETV ETV
97 Jul 13 ET ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 14 ET ET T T T ETV V
97 Jul 15 ET ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 16 ET ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jul 17 ET ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jul 18 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
97 Jul 19 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
97 Jul 20 ET ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 21 ET ET T T T ETV
97 Jul 22 ET T T T ETV
97 Jul 23 ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Jul 24 ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 25 ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jul 26 ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jul 27 ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 28 ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Jul 29 ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Jul 30-31 ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV ETV

97 Aug 1 ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV


97 Aug 2- 4 ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Aug 5 ET T T ENTV T ETV ETV
97 Aug 6 ET T T ENTV T ETV V ETV
97 Aug 7 ET T T NTV T ETV V
97 Aug 8 ET T T T ETV V
97 Aug 9-10 ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Aug 11 ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Aug 12 ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Aug 13 ET T T NTV T V ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
97 Aug 14 ET T T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Aug 15 ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV
97 Aug 16 ET T T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Aug 17 ET T T T ETV
97 Aug 18 ET T T T ETV ETV
97 Aug 19 T T T ETV ETV
97 Aug 20 ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Aug 21 T T NTV T ETV
97 Aug 22 T T T ETV
97 Aug 23 ET T T T V ETV
97 Aug 24 ET T T T ETV V ETV
97 Aug 25-26 ET T T T ETV ETV ETV
97 Aug 27 ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV ETV
97 Aug 28 ET T T NTV T ETV ETV ETV ETV
97 Aug 29 ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Aug 30-31 ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV

97 Sep 1- 2 ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV


97 Sep 3 ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV
97 Sep 4 ET T T NTV T ETV V ETV ETV ETV
97 Sep 5 ET T T T V ETV ETV ETV
97 Sep 6 ET T T T V ETV ETV
97 Sep 7 ET T T T ETV
97 Sep 8 T T T V ETV
97 Sep 9 ET T T T V ETV
97 Sep 10-11 T T NTV T V ETV
97 Sep 12-13 ET T T T V
97 Sep 14 ET T T T
97 Sep 15 T T NTV T V ETV
97 Sep 16-17 ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Sep 18 ET T T NTV T V ETV
97 Sep 19-21 ET T T T V ETV
97 Sep 22-23 ET T T T V ETV ETV
97 Sep 24 ET T T NTV T V ETV ETV
97 Sep 25 ET ET T T NTV T V ETV ETV
97 Sep 26 ET T T T V ETV ETV
97 Sep 27-29 ET ET T T T V ETV
97 Sep 30 ET T T T V ETV ETV

97 Oct 1 ET ET T T NTV T ETV ETV


97 Oct 2 ET T T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Oct 3 ET T T T ETV ETV
97 Oct 4 ET ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 5- 6 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
97 Oct 7 ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 8- 9 ET ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Oct 10-11 ET ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 12 ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 13 ET ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 14 ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 15 ET T T NTV T

146
97 Oct 16 T T NTV T
97 Oct 17 T T T ETV
97 Oct 18-20 ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 21 ET ET T T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
97 Oct 22 ET ET T T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Oct 23 ET T T NTV T ETV ETV
97 Oct 24-27 T T T ETV
97 Oct 28 ET T T T ETV
97 Oct 29-30 ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Oct 31 ET T T T ETV

97 Nov 1- 2 ET T T T
97 Nov 3- 4 ET T T T ETV
97 Nov 5- 6 ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Nov 7 ET T T T ETV
97 Nov 8 ET T T T
97 Nov 9 ET T T ENTV T
97 Nov 10 ET T T T
97 Nov 11 ET T T T ETV
97 Nov 12-13 T T ENTV T ETV
97 Nov 14 T T ENTV T
97 Nov 15 T T NTV T
97 Nov 16 T T NTV T ETV
97 Nov 17-18 ET T T ENTV T ETV
97 Nov 19 ET T T ENTV T
97 Nov 20 ET T T ENTV T ETV
97 Nov 21 ET T T T ETV
97 Nov 22-23 ET T T T
97 Nov 24 ET T T ENTV T ETV
97 Nov 25 T T ENTV T ETV ETV
97 Nov 26 ET T T ENTV T ETV
97 Nov 27 ET T T ENTV T
97 Nov 28-29 ET T T T ETV ETV
97 Nov 30 ET T T T ETV

97 Dec 1 ET T T T ETV
97 Dec 2 ET T T ENTV T ETV ETV
97 Dec 3 ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Dec 4 ET T T NTV T
97 Dec 5 ET T T T
97 Dec 6 ET T T T ETV
97 Dec 7- 8 T T T ETV
97 Dec 9 ET T T T ETV
97 Dec 10-11 ET T T NTV T
97 Dec 12 T T T
97 Dec 13-16 T T ENTV T
97 Dec 17 T T NTV T
97 Dec 18 ET T T NTV T ETV
97 Dec 19-22 ET T T T ETV
97 Dec 23 T T T
97 Dec 24-25 ET T T NTV T
97 Dec 26 T T T ETV
97 Dec 27-30 ET T T T ETV
97 Dec 31 ET T T T

98 Jan 1- 2 ET T T
98 Jan 3 T T
98 Jan 4- 8 ET T T
98 Jan 9 T T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
98 Jan 10 T T ENTV T ETV
98 Jan 11-12 T T T
98 Jan 13-14 T T ENTV T
98 Jan 15-19 ET T T T
98 Jan 20-21 ET T T T ETV
98 Jan 22 ET T T T ETV ETV
98 Jan 23-24 ET T T T ETV
98 Jan 25 ET T T T
98 Jan 26 T T T ETV
98 Jan 27-30 ET T T T ETV
98 Jan 31 ET T T ENTV T ETV

98 Feb 1- 2 ET T T ENTV T ETV


98 Feb 3 ET T T ENTV T
98 Feb 4 ET T T T
98 Feb 5- 7 ET T T T ETV
98 Feb 8- 9 ET T T T
98 Feb 10-16 T T T
98 Feb 17 ET T T T
98 Feb 18 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Feb 19 ET ET T T T
98 Feb 20 ET T T T
98 Feb 21 ET ET T T T
98 Feb 22-23 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Feb 24-26 ET ET T T T
98 Feb 27 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Feb 28 ET ET T T ENTV T ETV

98 Mar 1- 3 ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 4- 5 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 6 ET ET T T T
98 Mar 7-10 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 11-12 ET T T T
98 Mar 13 T T T
98 Mar 14-16 ET T T T
98 Mar 17 ET ET T T T
98 Mar 18 ET T T T
98 Mar 19-20 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 21 ET T T T
98 Mar 22 ET ET T T T

147
98 Mar 23-25 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 26-27 ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 28 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 29 ET T T T ETV
98 Mar 30-31 ET ET T T T ETV

98 Apr 1 ET ET T T T ETV ETV


98 Apr 2 ET T T T ETV ETV
98 Apr 3- 4 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Apr 5- 6 ET T T T ETV
98 Apr 7 ET ET T T T ETV
98 Apr 8- 9 ET T T T ETV
98 Apr 10 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
98 Apr 11 ET ET T T ENTV T ETV
98 Apr 12-15 ET ET T T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
98 Apr 16-21 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
98 Apr 22-23 ET ET T T T ETV ETV ETV
98 Apr 24-30 ET ET T T T ETV ETV

98 May 1- 6 ET ET T T T ETV ETV


98 May 7 ET ET T T T ETV V ETV
98 May 8- 9 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
98 May 10-12 ET ET T T T ETV
98 May 13 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
98 May 14-15 ET ET T T T ETV ETV ETV
98 May 16 ET T T T ETV ETV ETV
98 May 17-20 ET ET T T T ETV V ETV ETV
98 May 21 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
98 May 22-25 ET ET T T T ETV ETV ETV
98 May 26 ET ET T T T ETV ETV
98 May 27-29 ET ET T T T ETV ETV ETV
98 May 30-31 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV

98 Jun 1- 8 ET ET T T ETV ETV


98 Jun 9-13 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jun 14-15 ET ET T T ETV ETV
98 Jun 16 ET T T ETV ETV
98 Jun 17 ET ET T T ETV ETV
98 Jun 18-20 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
98 Jun 21 ET ET T T ETV ETV
98 Jun 22 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jun 23-24 ET ET T T ETV ETV
98 Jun 25 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jun 26-27 ET ET T T ETV ETV ETV
98 Jun 28-29 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jun 30 ET ET T T ETV ETV

98 Jul 1- 2 ET ET T T ETV ETV


98 Jul 3- 8 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jul 9-10 ET ET T T ETV ETV
98 Jul 11 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jul 12 ET ET T T ETV V
98 Jul 13-15 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jul 16-20 ET ET T T ETV V
98 Jul 21 ET ET T T ETV
98 Jul 22-24 ET ET T T ETV V ETV
98 Jul 25-26 ET ET T T ETV ETV
98 Jul 27-31 ET ET T T ETV V ETV

98 Aug 1- 3 ET ET T T ETV V ETV


98 Aug 4 ET ET T T ETV V
98 Aug 5- 6 ET ET T T ETV ETV
98 Aug 7 ET T T ETV
98 Aug 8 T T ETV
98 Aug 9-10 ET T T ETV V
98 Aug 11-12 ET T T ETV V ETV
98 Aug 13 ET T T ETV V
98 Aug 14-15 ET T T ETV ETV
98 Aug 16 ET T T ETV V ETV
98 Aug 17 ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
98 Aug 18 ET T T V ETV ETV
98 Aug 19-24 ET T T ETV V ETV ETV
98 Aug 25-29 ET T T ETV V ETV
98 Aug 30 ET T T ETV V
98 Aug 31 ET T T ETV V ETV

98 Sep 1 ET T T ETV V ETV


98 Sep 2- 3 ET T T ETV ETV
98 Sep 4- 5 ET T T ETV
98 Sep 6 T T ETV
98 Sep 7 ET T T ETV V
98 Sep 8-10 ET T T V
98 Sep 11-12 ET T T ETV
98 Sep 13-15 ET T T V ETV
98 Sep 16 ET T T ETV
98 Sep 17 ET T T ETV ETV
98 Sep 18 ET T T V ETV ETV
98 Sep 19 ET T T ETV
98 Sep 20-22 ET T T V ETV
98 Sep 23 ET T T ETV
98 Sep 24-25 ET T T V ETV
98 Sep 26-27 ET T T V
98 Sep 28 T T V ETV
98 Sep 29-30 T T ETV

98 Oct 1- 3 ET T T ETV
98 Oct 4 T T ETV
98 Oct 5-12 ET T T
98 Oct 13 ET T T NT

148
98 Oct 14 ET T T
98 Oct 15-16 ET T T ETV ETV
98 Oct 17 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
98 Oct 18 ET T T ETV ETV
98 Oct 19-22 ET T T ETV ETV ETV
98 Oct 23 ET T T ETV ETV
98 Oct 24-25 ET T T ETV
98 Oct 26-28 T T ETV
98 Oct 29-31 T T

98 Nov 1- 3 T T
98 Nov 4- 5 T T ETV
98 Nov 6- 8 T T
98 Nov 9-14 T T ETV
98 Nov 15-16 T T ETV ETV
98 Nov 17 T T ETV
98 Nov 18-19 T T ETV ETV
98 Nov 20-22 T T
98 Nov 23 T T ETV
98 Nov 24 T T ETV ETV
98 Nov 25-30 T T

98 Dec 1- 7 T T
98 Dec 8-12 T T ETV
98 Dec 13 T T
98 Dec 14-16 T T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
98 Dec 17 T T
98 Dec 18-31 T

99 Jan 1- 3 T
99 Jan 4- 8 T ETV
99 Jan 9-10 T
99 Jan 11-12 T ETV
99 Jan 13-14 T
99 Jan 15-17 T ETV
99 Jan 18-21 T T ETV
99 Jan 22-23 T T
99 Jan 24-27 T T ETV
99 Jan 28-31 T T

99 Feb 1- 2 T T
99 Feb 3-11 T T ETV
99 Feb 12-14 T T
99 Feb 15-16 T T ETV
99 Feb 17 T T ETV ETV
99 Feb 18 ET T T ETV ETV
99 Feb 19 ET T T
99 Feb 20-24 ET T T ETV
99 Feb 25 ET T T
99 Feb 26-28 ET T T ETV

99 Mar 1 ET T T
99 Mar 2- 3 ET T T ETV
99 Mar 4- 7 ET T T
99 Mar 8-11 ET T T ETV
99 Mar 12 ET T T
99 Mar 13-14 ET T T ETV
99 Mar 15 ET T T
99 Mar 16-23 ET T T ETV
99 Mar 24 T T ETV
99 Mar 25-29 ET T T ETV
99 Mar 30-31 ET T ETV

99 Apr 1 ET T ETV
99 Apr 2- 4 ET T
99 Apr 5 T ETV
99 Apr 6- 8 T ETV ETV
99 Apr 9-10 T ETV
99 Apr 11 T ETV ETV
99 Apr 12-14 T ETV
99 Apr 15 T ETV ETV
99 Apr 16 ET T ETV ETV
99 Apr 17-19 ET T ETV ETV ETV
99 Apr 20 ET T ETV ETV ETV
99 Apr 21 ET T ETV ETV ETV ETV
99 Apr 22 ET T ETV ETV ETV
99 Apr 23-28 ET T ETV ETV
99 Apr 29-30 ET T ETV

99 May 1- 6 ET T ETV
99 May 7 ET ET T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
99 May 8 ET T ETV
99 May 9-10 ET ET T ETV
99 May 11 ET ET T ETV ETV
99 May 12-15 ET ET T ETV ETV ETV
99 May 16-28 ET ET T ETV ETV
99 May 29 ET ET T ETV
99 May 30 ET T ETV
99 May 31 ET ET T ETV

99 Jun 1- 2 ET ET T ETV
99 Jun 3-13 ET ET T ETV ETV
99 Jun 14-15 ET T ETV ETV
99 Jun 16 ET T ETV
99 Jun 17 ET T ETV ETV
99 Jun 18-26 ET ET T ETV ETV
99 Jun 27-30 ET ET T ETV

99 Jul 1 ET ET T ETV

149
99 Jul 2 ET ET T
99 Jul 3- 4 ET T ETV
99 Jul 5- 6 ET ET T ETV
99 Jul 7-10 ET ET T ETV ETV
99 Jul 11-13 ET ET T ETV
99 Jul 14-25 ET ET T ETV ETV
99 Jul 26 ET T ETV ETV
99 Jul 27-31 ET T ETV

99 Aug 1 ET T ETV
99 Aug 2- 9 T ETV
99 Aug 10-11 T ETV ETV
99 Aug 12-16 T ETV
99 Aug 17-22 T ETV ETV
99 Aug 23 T ETV
99 Aug 24 T ETV ETV
99 Aug 25-28 T ETV
99 Aug 29-30 T ETV ETV
99 Aug 31 T ETV

99 Sep 1- 2 T ETV
99 Sep 3 T ETV
99 Sep 4- 5 T ETV ETV
99 Sep 6 T ETV ETV
99 Sep 7-10 ET T ETV ETV
99 Sep 11-12 ET T
99 Sep 13 ET T ETV
99 Sep 14 ET T ETV ETV
99 Sep 15-17 ET T ETV
99 Sep 18-22 ET T
99 Sep 23-24 ET T ETV
99 Sep 25-30 ET T

99 Oct 1- 4 ET T
99 Oct 5- 8 ET T ETV
99 Oct 9 ET T ETV ETV
99 Oct 10-11 ET T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
99 Oct 12-13 T
99 Oct 14 T ETV
99 Oct 15 ET T ETV
99 Oct 16-17 ET T
99 Oct 18-19 T
99 Oct 20-24 ET T
99 Oct 25 T
99 Oct 26 T ETV
99 Oct 27-31 ET T ETV

99 Nov 1- 9 ET T ETV
99 Nov 10 ET T
99 Nov 11-12 ET T ETV
99 Nov 13-16 ET T ETV
99 Nov 17 T ETV
99 Nov 18-21 ET T
99 Nov 22-24 T
99 Nov 25-30 ET T

99 Dec 1- 7 ET T
99 Dec 8-10 ET T ETV
99 Dec 11-12 ET T
99 Dec 13 T
99 Dec 14-20 ET T
99 Dec 21-25 T
99 Dec 26-29 ET T
99 Dec 30-31 ET

00 Jan 1 ET
00 Jan 4 ET
00 Jan 5-11 ET T
00 Jan 12-13 ET T ETV
00 Jan 14-17 ET T
00 Jan 18-19 ET T ETV
00 Jan 20-23 T
00 Jan 24-31 ET T

00 Feb 1 ET T
00 Feb 2- 3 ET T ETV
00 Feb 4- 6 ET T
00 Feb 7- 9 ET T ETV
00 Feb 10-14 T
00 Feb 15-16 T ETV
00 Feb 17 ET T ETV
00 Feb 18-21 ET T
00 Feb 22 T
00 Feb 23-25 ET T
00 Feb 26-27 ET T ETV
00 Feb 28-29 ET T ETV ETV

00 Mar 1 ET T ETV ETV


00 Mar 2- 3 ET T ETV
00 Mar 4- 5 ET T
00 Mar 6- 9 ET T ETV
00 Mar 10-12 ET T
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
00 Mar 13-15 ET T ETV
00 Mar 16 ET T
00 Mar 17-19 ET T ETV
00 Mar 20-21 ET T
00 Mar 22-25 ET T ETV
00 Mar 26-29 ET T
00 Mar 30-31 ET T ETV

150
00 Apr 1- 2 ET T ETV
00 Apr 3- 5 ET T
00 Apr 6- 7 ET T ETV
00 Apr 8-11 ET T
00 Apr 12-15 ET T ETV
00 Apr 16-29 ET T
00 Apr 30 ET T ETV

00 May 1- 4 ET T ETV
00 May 5- 6 ET T
00 May 7- 8 ET T ETV
00 May 9-10 ET T
00 May 11-12 ET T ETV
00 May 13-14 ET T
00 May 15-16 ET T ETV
00 May 17-22 ET T
00 May 23-24 T
00 May 25-27 T ETV
00 May 28 ET T ETV
00 May 29 ET T
00 May 30-31 ET T ETV

00 Jun 1- 2 ET T
00 Jun 3- 4 ET T ETV
00 Jun 5- 6 ET T
00 Jun 7- 8 ET T ETV
00 Jun 9 ET T
00 Jun 10-11 ET T ETV
00 Jun 12-16 ET T
00 Jun 17-20 ET T ETV
00 Jun 21-30 ET T

00 Jul 1- 6 ET T
00 Jul 7-24 ET T ETV
00 Jul 25-31 ET T

00 Aug 1 ET T
00 Aug 2- 3 ET T ETV
00 Aug 4- 6 ET T
00 Aug 7- 8 ET T ETV
00 Aug 9 ET T
00 Aug 10-11 ET T ETV
00 Aug 12-30 ET T
00 Aug 31 ET T ETV

00 Sep 1 ET T ETV
00 Sep 2- 5 ET T
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
00 Sep 6- 7 ET T ETV
00 Sep 8-30 ET T

00 Oct 1- 8 ET T
00 Oct 9 T
00 Oct 10 ET T
00 Oct 11-12 T
00 Oct 13-18 ET T
00 Oct 19-23 ET T ETV
00 Oct 24 T ETV
00 Oct 25-26 ET T ETV
00 Oct 27-31 T

00 Nov 1- 2 T ETV
00 Nov 3- 4 T
00 Nov 5- 8 T ETV
00 Nov 9-19 T
00 Nov 20-26 T ETV
00 Nov 27 T
00 Nov 28 T ETV
00 Nov 29 T ETV
00 Nov 30 T ETV ETV

00 Dec 1 T ETV
00 Dec 2- 3 T ETV ETV
00 Dec 4 T ETV
00 Dec 5 T ETV ETV
00 Dec 6 T ETV
00 Dec 7 T ETV ETV
00 Dec 8 T ETV
00 Dec 9-10 T ETV ETV
00 Dec 11 T
00 Dec 12-13 T ETV
00 Dec 14-19 T
00 Dec 20 T ETV
00 Dec 21 T
00 Dec 22-23 T ETV
00 Dec 24 T
00 Dec 25 T ETV
00 Dec 26-31 T

01 Jan 1- 5 ET T ETV ETV


01 Jan 6 ET T
01 Jan 7 ET T ETV
01 Jan 8- 9 ET T
01 Jan 10-12 ET T ETV
01 Jan 13-17 ET T
01 Jan 18-19 ET T ETV
01 Jan 20-23 ET T
01 Jan 24-25 ET T ETV
01 Jan 26 ET T ETV ETV
01 Jan 27-28 ET T ETV
01 Jan 29-30 ET T ETV
01 Jan 31 ET T ETV

151
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
01 Feb 1 T ETV ETV
01 Feb 2 T ETV
01 Feb 3 T ETV
01 Feb 4 T
01 Feb 5 ET T
01 Feb 6 ET T ETV ETV
01 Feb 7- 8 ET T ETV
01 Feb 9 ET T
01 Feb 10 ET T ETV
01 Feb 11 T ETV
01 Feb 12 T ETV ETV
01 Feb 13 T ETV
01 Feb 14 T ETV ETV
01 Feb 15-16 T ETV
01 Feb 17-19 ET T ETV
01 Feb 20 ET ET T ETV ETV
01 Feb 21 ET ET T ETV
01 Feb 22-23 T ETV
01 Feb 24 ET T ETV
01 Feb 25 ET T
01 Feb 26 ET ET T
01 Feb 27 ET ET T ETV
01 Feb 28 ET ET T ETV

01 Mar 1 ET ET T ETV ETV


01 Mar 2 ET T ETV
01 Mar 3- 4 ET T
01 Mar 5- 6 ET ET T
01 Mar 7- 9 ET T
01 Mar 10 T
01 Mar 11-13 ET T
01 Mar 14 ET ET T
01 Mar 15 ET ET T ETV
01 Mar 16-18 ET T
01 Mar 19-20 ET T ETV
01 Mar 21 ET T ETV ETV
01 Mar 22 ET T
01 Mar 23-25 ET T ETV ETV
01 Mar 26-27 ET T ETV
01 Mar 28 ET T
01 Mar 29 ET T ETV
01 Mar 30-31 ET T

01 Apr 1 ET T ETV
01 Apr 2 ET T ETV ETV
01 Apr 3 ET T ETV
01 Apr 4 ET T ETV ETV
01 Apr 5 ET T ETV
01 Apr 6 ET T ETV
01 Apr 7- 9 ET T
01 Apr 10-11 ET T ETV
01 Apr 12 ET T
01 Apr 13 ET T ETV
01 Apr 14 ET T ETV
01 Apr 15 T
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
01 Apr 16 ET T
01 Apr 17 ET ET T
01 Apr 18-26 ET T
01 Apr 27-30 ET T ETV

01 May 1 ET T ETV
01 May 2-14 ET T
01 May 15 ET ET T
01 May 16-24 ET T
01 May 25 ET ET T
01 May 26-29 ET T
01 May 30-31 ET ET T

01 Jun 1 ET T
01 Jun 2- 3 ET ET T
01 Jun 4- 7 ET T
01 Jun 8-12 ET ET T
01 Jun 13-14 ET ET T ETV
01 Jun 15-18 ET T ETV
01 Jun 19-20 ET ET T ETV
01 Jun 21 ET T
01 Jun 22 ET ET T
01 Jun 23-24 ET T
01 Jun 25 ET T ETV
01 Jun 26 ET ET T ETV
01 Jun 27-28 ET T ETV
01 Jun 29-30 ET T

01 Jul 1- 5 ET T
01 Jul 6- 7 ET T ETV
01 Jul 8- 9 ET T
01 Jul 10-15 ET T ETV
01 Jul 16-17 ET T
01 Jul 18-23 ET T ETV
01 Jul 24 ET T
01 Jul 25 ET ET T
01 Jul 26-27 ET ET T ETV
01 Jul 28 ET T ETV
01 Jul 29 ET ET T ETV
01 Jul 30-31 ET T ETV

01 Aug 1- 2 ET ET T ETV
01 Aug 3- 8 ET T
01 Aug 9 ET ET T

152
01 Aug 10-13 ET T
01 Aug 14-15 ET T ETV
01 Aug 16-21 ET T
01 Aug 22-26 ET T ETV
01 Aug 27 ET T
01 Aug 28-30 ET T ETV
01 Aug 31 ET T

01 Sep 1 ET T ETV
01 Sep 2 T ETV
01 Sep 3-10 ET T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
01 Sep 11-12 ET T ETV ETV
01 Sep 13-18 ET T ETV
01 Sep 19-22 ET T
01 Sep 23-24 ET T ETV
01 Sep 25 ET T
01 Sep 26-27 ET T ETV
01 Sep 28 T
01 Sep 29-30 ET T ETV

01 Oct 1- 3 ET T ETV
01 Oct 4 ET T ETV
01 Oct 5- 6 ET T ETV
01 Oct 7- 8 ET T
01 Oct 9 ET T
01 Oct 10-11 ET T ETV
01 Oct 12 ET T ETV
01 Oct 13-14 ET T
01 Oct 15 ET T ETV
01 Oct 16 ET T ETV
01 Oct 17 ET T
01 Oct 18 ET T ETV
01 Oct 19-21 ET T ETV
01 Oct 22 ET T
01 Oct 23 ET T
01 Oct 24 T
01 Oct 25 ET T ETV
01 Oct 26 ET T ETV
01 Oct 27 T ETV
01 Oct 28-29 T
01 Oct 30-31 T ETV

01 Nov 1- 2 T
01 Nov 3 T ETV
01 Nov 4 T ETV
01 Nov 5 T
01 Nov 6- 7 T ETV
01 Nov 8-10 T ETV
01 Nov 11 T ETV
01 Nov 12-14 T ETV
01 Nov 15-21 T ETV
01 Nov 22-25 T
01 Nov 26-30 T

01 Dec 1- 3 T ETV
01 Dec 4 T ETV
01 Dec 5 T ETV
01 Dec 6-12 T ETV ETV
01 Dec 13 T ETV
01 Dec 14 T ETV
01 Dec 15-16 T ETV ETV
01 Dec 17-20 T ETV
01 Dec 21-24 T ETV ETV
01 Dec 25 T ETV
01 Dec 26-30 T ETV
01 Dec 31 T ETV ETV

|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
02 Jan 1 T ETV ETV
02 Jan 2 ETV ETV
02 Jan 3- 4 T ETV ETV
02 Jan 5 T ETV
02 Jan 6 T
02 Jan 7 T ETV
02 Jan 8- 9 T NTV ETV
02 Jan 10 T ETV ETV
02 Jan 11 T NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Jan 12 T NTV ETV ETV
02 Jan 13 T NTV ETV ETV
02 Jan 14 T NTV ETV ETV
02 Jan 15-16 T
02 Jan 17-19 T ETV
02 Jan 20 T
02 Jan 21 T
02 Jan 22 T NTV ETV
02 Jan 23 T ETV
02 Jan 24 T
02 Jan 25 T ETV
02 Jan 26 ET T
02 Jan 27 ET T NTV
02 Jan 28 ET T
02 Jan 29 ET T ETV
02 Jan 30-31 ET T ETV

02 Feb 1 ET T NTV ETV ETV


02 Feb 2 ET T ETV ETV
02 Feb 3 ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Feb 4 ET T NTV ETV
02 Feb 5 ET T ETV
02 Feb 6- 7 ET T NTV ETV ETV ETV

153
02 Feb 8 ET T ETV ETV
02 Feb 9 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Feb 10 ET T ETV
02 Feb 11 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Feb 12 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Feb 13 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Feb 14 ET T ETV ETV
02 Feb 15 ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Feb 16 ET T ETV ETV
02 Feb 17 ET ET T ETV
02 Feb 18 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Feb 19 ET T ETV
02 Feb 20 ET ET T
02 Feb 21 ET ET T ETV
02 Feb 22 ET ET T
02 Feb 23-26 ET ET T ETV
02 Feb 27 ET ET T NTV
02 Feb 28 ET T

02 Mar 1 ET T
02 Mar 2 ET T ETV
02 Mar 3 ET ET T ETV
02 Mar 4 ET T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
02 Mar 5 ET T ETV
02 Mar 6-12 ET ET T ETV
02 Mar 13 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 14-16 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 17 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Mar 18 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 19 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 20 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Mar 21 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 22 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 23 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 24 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Mar 25-26 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 27 ET T ETV ETV
02 Mar 28-30 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Mar 31 ET ET T NTV ETV

02 Apr 1- 2 ET ET T ETV ETV


02 Apr 3 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 4 ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 5 ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 6 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Apr 7 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Apr 8 ET T NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Apr 9 ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 10 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Apr 11 ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 12-13 ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Apr 14-15 ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 16 ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 17 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 18 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Apr 19-20 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 21 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Apr 22 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Apr 23 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Apr 24 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Apr 25 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Apr 26-27 ET ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Apr 28 ET ET T ETV
02 Apr 29 ET ET T NTV ETV
02 Apr 30 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV

02 May 1- 2 ET ET T ETV ETV


02 May 3 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 May 4 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 May 5- 7 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 May 8 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 May 9 ET ET T ETV
02 May 10-12 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 May 13-14 ET ET T ETV
02 May 15-16 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 May 17-19 ET ET T ETV
02 May 20-21 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 May 22 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
02 May 23 ET ET T NTV ETV
02 May 24 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 May 25 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 May 26 ET ET T NTV ETV
02 May 27-29 ET ET T ETV
02 May 30 ET ET T NTV ETV
02 May 31 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV

02 Jun 1- 2 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV


02 Jun 3- 4 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Jun 5 ET ET T ETV
02 Jun 6- 7 ET ET T NTV ETV
02 Jun 8 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Jun 9 ET ET T NTV ETV
02 Jun 10-12 ET ET T NTV ETV
02 Jun 13-14 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Jun 15-18 ET ET T ETV
02 Jun 19-20 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Jun 21-23 ET ET T ETV
02 Jun 24-25 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Jun 26-28 ET ET T ETV

154
02 Jun 29 ET ET T
02 Jun 30 ET ET T ETV

02 Jul 1 ET ET T ETV ETV


02 Jul 2- 6 ET ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Jul 7- 9 ET ET T ET ETV
02 Jul 10-16 ET ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Jul 17 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Jul 18 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
02 Jul 19-20 ET ET T ET ETV
02 Jul 21-23 ET ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Jul 24 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Jul 25 ET ET T ETV
02 Jul 26-28 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Jul 29-30 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Jul 31 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV

02 Aug 1- 3 ET ET T ET ETV ETV


02 Aug 4 ET ET T ET ETV
02 Aug 5 ET T ET
02 Aug 6- 7 ET ET T ET ETV
02 Aug 8 ET ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Aug 9 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Aug 10-11 ET ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Aug 12 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Aug 13-15 ET ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Aug 16 ET ET T ET ETV
02 Aug 17-20 ET ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Aug 21-26 ET ET T ETV ETV
02 Aug 27-29 ET ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Aug 30-31 ET ET T ET ETV ETV ETV

02 Sep 1 ET ET T ET ETV ETV ETV


02 Sep 2 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
02 Sep 3 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
02 Sep 4 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 5 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 6 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 7 ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Sep 8-13 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 14-16 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Sep 17 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 18-20 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 21 ET T ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 22 ET T ETV ETV
02 Sep 23 T ETV ETV
02 Sep 24-25 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
02 Sep 26-27 ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Sep 28-29 ET T ET ETV
02 Sep 30 ET T ET ETV ETV

02 Oct 1 ET T ET ETV ETV


02 Oct 2- 6 ET T ET ETV
02 Oct 7 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Oct 8 ET T NTV ETV ETV
02 Oct 9 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Oct 10 T ET NTV ETV
02 Oct 11 ET T ET ETV
02 Oct 12 ET T ET NTV ETV
02 Oct 13 ET T ET ETV
02 Oct 14 ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Oct 15-19 ET T ETV ETV
02 Oct 20 ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Oct 21-22 ET T ETV ETV
02 Oct 23 ET T ET ETV ETV
02 Oct 24 T ET ETV ETV
02 Oct 25 ET T ET ETV
02 Oct 26-27 T ET ETV
02 Oct 28-31 T ET ETV ETV

02 Nov 1- 3 T ET ETV ETV


02 Nov 4 T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Nov 5 T ET ETV ETV
02 Nov 6 T ET NTV ETV
02 Nov 7 T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Nov 8 T ET ETV ETV
02 Nov 9-10 T ETV
02 Nov 11-12 T ET ETV
02 Nov 13-15 T ET ETV ETV
02 Nov 16-17 T ET NTV ETV
02 Nov 18 T ET ETV ETV
02 Nov 19 T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Nov 20-21 T ETV ETV
02 Nov 22 T ETV
02 Nov 23-24 T ETV ETV
02 Nov 25-26 T ETV
02 Nov 27-28 T ET ETV ETV
02 Nov 29-30 T ET ETV

|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
02 Dec 1- 4 T ET ETV ETV
02 Dec 5 T ET ETV
02 Dec 6-12 T ET ETV ETV
02 Dec 13 T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Dec 14-15 T ET NTV ETV
02 Dec 16 T ET NTV ETV ETV
02 Dec 17-18 T ET ETV ETV
02 Dec 19 T NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Dec 20 T NTV ETV ETV
02 Dec 21-23 T ETV ETV

155
02 Dec 24-26 T ET ETV ETV
02 Dec 27 T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
02 Dec 28 T ET ETV ETV ETV
02 Dec 29-31 ET ETV ETV

03 Jan 1 ET ETV
03 Jan 2 ET ETV ETV
03 Jan 3 ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Jan 4- 7 ET ETV ETV
03 Jan 8-18 T ET ETV ETV
03 Jan 19-20 T NTV ETV ETV
03 Jan 21 T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Jan 22-24 T ET ETV ETV
03 Jan 25-28 T ET ETV
03 Jan 29-30 T ET NTV ETV
03 Jan 31 T ET ETV

03 Feb 1- 6 T ET ETV ETV


03 Feb 7- 8 T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Feb 9-10 T ET ETV ETV
03 Feb 11 T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Feb 12-15 T ET ETV ETV
03 Feb 16-17 T ETV
03 Feb 18 ET T ETV
03 Feb 19 T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Feb 20-21 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Feb 22-28 ET T ET ETV ETV

03 Mar 1- 2 ET T ET ETV ETV


03 Mar 3 ET T ET ETV
03 Mar 4 ET T ET ETV ETV
03 Mar 5- 9 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Mar 10 ET T ETV ETV
03 Mar 11-12 ET T ET ETV ETV
03 Mar 13-14 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Mar 15-16 ET T ET ETV ETV
03 Mar 17-18 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
03 Mar 19-20 ET T ETV ETV ETV
03 Mar 21-25 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
03 Mar 26 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
03 Mar 27-31 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV

03 Apr 1- 8 ET T ET ETV ETV ETV


03 Apr 9 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
03 Apr 10-11 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
03 Apr 12 ET ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
03 Apr 13-14 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
03 Apr 15 ET ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
03 Apr 16 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Apr 17 ET ET T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
03 Apr 18-27 ET ET T ET ETV ETV ETV
03 Apr 28 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Apr 29-30 ET ET T ET ETV ETV

03 May 1- 6 ET ET T ET ETV ETV


03 May 7-10 ET ET T ET ETV
03 May 11 ET ET T ET
03 May 12-14 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 May 15 ET ET T ET ETV
03 May 16 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 May 17 ET ET T NTV ETV
03 May 18-20 ET ET T ET ETV
03 May 21 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 May 22-28 ET ET T ET ETV
03 May 29 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 May 30-31 ET ET T ET ETV

03 Jun 1- 7 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Jun 8- 9 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Jun 10-11 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Jun 12 ET T ET ETV
03 Jun 13-20 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Jun 21-23 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Jun 24-25 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Jun 26-28 ET ET T ET NTV
03 Jun 29 ET T ET ETV
03 Jun 30 ET ET T ET ETV

03 Jul 1 ET T ET ETV
03 Jul 2- 3 ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Jul 4 ET T ET ETV
03 Jul 5- 6 ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Jul 7 ET T ET ETV
03 Jul 8 ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Jul 9-11 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Jul 12-14 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Jul 15 ET ET T NTV ETV
03 Jul 16-21 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Jul 22 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Jul 23-31 ET ET T ET ETV

03 Aug 1-12 ET ET T ET ETV


03 Aug 13-17 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Aug 18 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Aug 19 ET ET T ET
03 Aug 20-21 ET ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Aug 22-31 ET ET T ET ETV

03 Sep 1- 5 ET ET T ET ETV
03 Sep 6- 8 ET T ET ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P

156
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
03 Sep 9-12 ET T ET ETV ETV
03 Sep 13 ET T ETV ETV
03 Sep 14-17 ET T ET ETV ETV
03 Sep 18-29 ET T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Sep 30 ET T ET ETV

03 Oct 1 ET T ET NTV ETV


03 Oct 2 ET T ET NTV
03 Oct 3- 4 ET T ET ETV
03 Oct 5 ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Oct 6- 8 ET T ET ETV
03 Oct 9-10 ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Oct 11 ET T ET ETV
03 Oct 12-15 ET T ET ETV ETV
03 Oct 16 ET T ETV
03 Oct 17-19 ET T ET NTV ETV
03 Oct 20 ET T ET ETV
03 Oct 21 T ET ETV
03 Oct 22-25 ET T ET ETV
03 Oct 26 T ET ETV
03 Oct 27 ET T ET ETV
03 Oct 28-30 T ET ETV
03 Oct 31 T ETV

03 Nov 1 T ETV
03 Nov 2- 4 T ET ETV
03 Nov 5 T ET
03 Nov 6-12 T ET ETV
03 Nov 13-16 T ET NTV ETV
03 Nov 17 T ET ETV
03 Nov 18-19 T ET NTV ETV
03 Nov 20-30 T ET ETV

03 Dec 1-15 T ET ETV


03 Dec 16-20 T ET NTV ETV
03 Dec 21-22 T ET ETV
03 Dec 23-24 T ET NTV ETV ETV
03 Dec 25 T ET ETV ETV
03 Dec 26-31 T ET ETV

04 Jan 1- 8 T ET ETV ETV


04 Jan 9-16 T ET ETV ETV ETV
04 Jan 17-21 T ET ETV ETV
04 Jan 22-23 T ET ETV ETV ETV
04 Jan 24-26 T ET ETV ETV
04 Jan 27-31 T ET ETV ETV ETV

04 Feb 1- 6 T ET ETV ETV ETV


04 Feb 7 T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
04 Feb 8 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Feb 9-10 T ET ETV ETV ETV
04 Feb 11 T ET ETV ETV
04 Feb 12 T ET ETV ETV ETV
04 Feb 13-17 T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
04 Feb 18 T ET ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
04 Feb 19 T ET ETV
04 Feb 20-24 T ET ETV ETV
04 Feb 25 T ET NTV ETV ETV
04 Feb 26 T ET NTV ETV ETV ETV
04 Feb 27-29 T ET ETV ETV ETV

04 Mar 1 T ET ETV ETV


04 Mar 2- 7 T ETV ETV
04 Mar 8-10 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Mar 11 T ETV ETV
04 Mar 12 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Mar 13-16 T ETV ETV ETV ETV
04 Mar 17-19 T NTV ETV ETV ETV ETV
04 Mar 20-25 T ETV ETV ETV ETV
04 Mar 26 T NTV ETV ETV ETV ETV
04 Mar 27-29 T ETV ETV ETV ETV
04 Mar 30-31 T NTV ETV ETV ETV ETV

04 Apr 1- 2 T NTV ETV ETV ETV ETV


04 Apr 3- 4 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Apr 5 T ETV ETV
04 Apr 6-11 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Apr 12-13 T ETV ETV
04 Apr 14 T NTV ETV ETV ETV
04 Apr 15-16 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Apr 17-18 T ETV ETV
04 Apr 19 T ETV
04 Apr 20 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Apr 21 T ETV ETV
04 Apr 22 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Apr 23 T ETV
04 Apr 24-25 T ETV ETV ETV
04 Apr 26-28 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Apr 29-30 T ETV ETV

04 May 1- 2 T
04 May 3- 4 T NTV ETV
04 May 5 T NTV
04 May 6 T NTV ETV
04 May 7-10 T ETV
04 May 11 T NTV ETV
04 May 12-30 T ETV
04 May 31 T NTV

04 Jun 1 T NTV
04 Jun 2 T
04 Jun 3- 5 T ETV

157
04 Jun 6 T NTV ETV
04 Jun 7 T ETV
04 Jun 8 T NTV ETV
04 Jun 9-22 T ETV
04 Jun 23 T NTV ETV
04 Jun 24-30 T ETV

04 Jul 1- 6 T ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
04 Jul 7 T NTV ETV
04 Jul 8-10 T ETV
04 Jul 11-12 T NTV ETV
04 Jul 13-17 T ETV
04 Jul 18-19 T NTV ETV
04 Jul 20-25 T ETV
04 Jul 26 T NTV ETV
04 Jul 27-31 T ETV

04 Aug 1-11 T ETV


04 Aug 12-14 T NTV ETV
04 Aug 15 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Aug 16 T NTV ETV
04 Aug 17 T ETV
04 Aug 18-23 T ETV ETV
04 Aug 24 T ETV
04 Aug 25-29 T ETV ETV
04 Aug 30 T NTV
04 Aug 31 T ETV ETV

04 Sep 1 T ETV ETV


04 Sep 2 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Sep 3 T ETV
04 Sep 4- 6 T ETV ETV
04 Sep 7 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Sep 8-14 T ETV ETV
04 Sep 15-19 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Sep 20-29 T ETV ETV
04 Sep 30 T ETV

04 Oct 1- 4 T ETV
04 Oct 5- 6 T
04 Oct 7 T ETV
04 Oct 8-11 T NTV ETV
04 Oct 12-13 T ETV
04 Oct 14-25 T ETV ETV
04 Oct 26 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Oct 27-31 T ETV ETV

04 Nov 1- 4 T ETV ETV


04 Nov 5- 8 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Nov 9-15 T ETV ETV
04 Nov 16 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Nov 17-22 T ETV ETV
04 Nov 23 T ETV
04 Nov 24-30 T ETV ETV

04 Dec 1 T NTV ETV ETV


04 Dec 2- 4 T NTV ETV
04 Dec 5 T NTV ETV ETV
04 Dec 6-14 T ETV ETV
04 Dec 15 T ETV
04 Dec 16-24 T ETV ETV
04 Dec 25-26 T ETV
04 Dec 27-29 T ETV ETV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
04 Dec 30-31 T ETV

05 Jan 1- 4 ETV ETV


05 Jan 5 ETV
05 Jan 6 ETV ETV
05 Jan 7 T ETV ETV
05 Jan 8 T NTV ETV ETV
05 Jan 9-19 T ETV ETV
05 Jan 20-25 T NTV ETV ETV
05 Jan 26-31 T ETV ETV

05 Feb 1-24 T ETV ETV


05 Feb 25-28 T ETV

05 Mar 1- 9 T ETV
05 Mar 10 T
05 Mar 11-12 T ETV
05 Mar 13 T ETV ETV
05 Mar 14-15 T ETV
05 Mar 16-25 T ETV ETV
05 Mar 26-31 T ETV ETV ETV

05 Apr 1 T ETV ETV ETV


05 Apr 2 T ETV ETV
05 Apr 3-23 T ETV ETV
05 Apr 24-25 T ETV
05 Apr 26-30 T ETV

05 May 1- 8 T ETV
05 May 9 T NTV ETV
05 May 10-12 T ETV
05 May 13 T NTV ETV
05 May 14 T ETV
05 May 15 T NTV ETV
05 May 16 T ETV
05 May 17-18 T NTV ETV

158
05 May 19 T ETV
05 May 20-23 T NTV ETV
05 May 24-26 T ETV
05 May 27-28 T NTV ETV
05 May 29-31 T ETV

05 Jun 1- 4 T ETV
05 Jun 5- 8 T NTV ETV
05 Jun 9-17 T ETV
05 Jun 18-19 T NTV ETV
05 Jun 20-30 T ETV

05 Jul 1-10 T ETV


05 Jul 11-14 T NTV ETV
05 Jul 15-31 T ETV

05 Aug 1 T ETV
05 Aug 2-17 T
05 Aug 18 T NTV
|--------------- OPTICAL MEASUREMENTS < 120 km ----------------|-- Both --|------------------- > 200 km ----------------------------------| 4C
PHOTOM
OPERATING DAYS SPM DBM STM SFM RBM EUM DVS WUP MTM UIL CSL USL PFP MJF IKF SPF AHF HFP AQF AFP FPF/AAF MFP WFP CFP PKF SFP RFP TFP P4P Y4P
--------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- --- --- ------- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---
-
05 Aug 19-24 T
05 Aug 25 T ETV
05 Aug 26-31 T NTV ETV

05 Sep 1- 5 T NTV ETV


05 Sep 6- 7 T ETV
05 Sep 8- 9 T
05 Sep 10-18 T ETV
05 Sep 19 T NTV ETV
05 Sep 20-29 T ETV
05 Sep 30 T NTV

05 Oct 1- 2 T NTV
05 Oct 3-23 T
05 Oct 24-27 T NTV
05 Oct 28-31 T

05 Nov 1-18 T
05 Nov 19-22 T NTV
05 Nov 23-30 T

05 Dec 1-28 T
05 Dec 29-30 NTV

06 Jan 5-31 T

06 Feb 1-28 T

06 Mar 1-31 T

06 Apr 1-30 T

06 May 1-31 T

06 Jun 1-30 T

06 Jul 1-31 T

06 Aug 1-31 T

06 Sep 1-30 T

06 Oct 1-31 T

06 Nov 1-30 T

06 Dec 1-28 T

159

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