Simultaneous meteor echo observations by large aperture VHF and UHF radars

We report simultaneous meteor echo observations using the Arecibo 430-MHz and 46.8-MHz radars. Using identical data taking and meteor selection criteria, 1868 and 367 meteors were found in the 430-MHz and 47-MHz beam respectively, while 145 were found in both beams during the 7 hours of observation. The smaller number of meteors detected by the VHF system and its wide beam width show that UHF meteors are far smaller than the VHF meteors. Of the 367 VHF echoes, there are only 10 trail echoes while the rest are head echoes. The small percentage of trail echoes was quite contrary to expectation. We estimate that VHF head echoes have a typical effective scattering cross section of 10-3 m2 although the spread of cross section for all the echoes was very large. The fact that there are only very few trail echoes observed leads us to suggest that the ratio of head echo power to the trail echo power increases with decreasing meteor size. Comparison of VHF and UHF echo characteristics suggests that the VHF head echoes are likely not very aspect sensitive. Of the 145 metoers observed by both radars, the powers received by the two systems were not correlated. Although antenna pattern difference may partially account for the lack of correlation, it is possible that UHF and VHF echoes are enhanced by different mechanisms.


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