For the next five years, the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska Fairbanks will host a summer school program in polar aeronomy and radio science (PARS). It will be held during a two-week period, usually in late July and early August. The school will follow the format that has been established over the last six years. The two weeks will be spent in a series of lectures, field trips, and experiments, at the space physics research facilities located around interior Alaska. The school has started out each year with a week in the Fairbanks area with lectures at the Geophysical Institute, and tours of the Geophysical Institute, the Poker Flat Research Range, and the HIgh Power Auroral Stimulation (HIPAS) ionospheric heating facility. Student experiments scheduled for the facilities in the Fairbanks area have been carried out during the first week of the school. For the second week of the school, the group has relocated to the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) Ionospheric Observatory at Gakona, Alaska, for additional tours and experiments. The experiments conducted during the school cover a variety of topics, including (1) observations of noctilucent clouds, (2) generation of extreme low frequency and very low frequency radio waves using the HAARP transmitter to modulate the auroral electrojet, and (3) generation of field-aligned density irregularities. Several students have presented their experiment results at major scientific workshops, and journal articles have been published on the results from PARS summer school experiments. The primary motivation for the summer school is to provide an opportunity for students to study the upper atmosphere and ionosphere at polar latitudes with practical experience built into the learning process. There is a need for more trained scientists and engineers with knowledge of the special effects that occur in the ionosphere at high latitudes. The summer school is provided to attract students with exceptional talent to become more familiar with this exciting area of study. The summer school has brought student-faculty pairs from universities around the country to Alaska.

Project Report

PARS Project outcome report The PARS summer school has been a very successful project. Each year of the school, the grant supported between 20 and 30 students to come to Alaska for a period of about 10 days for a series of lectures and experiments focused on the theme chosen for the year. The themes included "The role of the ionosphere in geospace ", "Ionospheric heating", "Incoherent-scatter and AMISR". The school was supported with funds from the NSF, the Air Force, and the Navy. The NSF provided about one third of the total cost, while the Air Force and Navy provided about two thirds. The funding supported travel and subsistence costs for the school participants. All UAF faculty salaries for time related to the school were paid for with other funds. Each year the school focused a different topic of ionospheric physics. The various facilities in Alaska were used for demonstrations, tours, and experiments to provide hands-on experience for the students. The school started with a week in Fairbanks for lectures at the Geophysical Institute and tours of the various experiment facilities around Fairbanks. Then, the group relocated to the HAARP Ionospheric Observatory at Gakona, Alaska for the remainder of the school. Tours included the Geophysical Institute itself, the Poker Flat Research Range, and the HIPAS ionospheric heating facility, and the HAARP facility. The format of the school was a mixture of lecture and discussion periods, tours, demonstrations, and experiments. Lectures covered a variety of topics relating to the upper atmosphere and using diagnostic instruments for detection of its properties. Each student participant proposed an experiment to be carried out during the school. Acceptance to the school was based upon their experiment proposals, so they required careful thought and planning. During the school the students carried out their experiments, analyzed the observations, and presented results. In addition, a number of the students continued analysis after the school and presented results at the annual Ionospheric Interactions Workshop.

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences (AGS)
Application #
0631506
Program Officer
Robert M. Robinson
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2006-09-15
Budget End
2012-08-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$190,000
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Alaska Fairbanks Campus
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Fairbanks
State
AK
Country
United States
Zip Code
99775