ZIP

The Zenith Incoherent Profiler is a low cost Incoherent Scatter Radar
system that is designed to be a fully remote observational station in
a planetary network of ionospheric instruments. A large and
mechanically simple zenith directed antenna is combined with an
HOM-IOT transmitter that is derived from Digital Television
Transmitter technology. All solid state tube modulation, control, and
monitoring is used to provide a high level of reliability. Initially
we plan to implement a demonstration ZIP design using the Millstone
Hill Zenith antenna. After this initial demonstration a fully
deployable version will be constructed using a large and low cost
antenna design. The ZIP construction and operation costs are projected
to be a small fraction of traditional incoherent scatter radar
designs.
ZIP systems will have excellent performance coupled with fully
automated 24/7 operations. Elements which contribute to the low cost
of this instrument include a modest average power level (50 kW), high
transmitter efficiency (70+%), simple fixed antenna designs, the use
of high power coax instead of waveguide, and full automation using
Software Radar technology. Additional cost optimization can be
obtained by dynamically varying the output power level and duty cycle
of the transmitter in response to changing geophysical conditions
without loss of efficiency. A mid-class incoherent scatter radar
system, such as the Zenith Incoherent Profiler, can provide access to
physical parameters that are unavailable using other experimental
techniques. An excellent example of this is the electron to ion
temperature ratio which can only be routinely determined in the
ionosphere using the incoherent scatter technique. Modestly more
costly and complicated design variations can also produce measurement
of ionospheric electric fields using multiple beams or multistatic
passive receiving arrays.
A low cost Incoherent Scatter Radar design is useful because it can be
widely deployed in numbers appropriate for a large scale Space Weather
observational network. ZIP systems can also be constructed and
operated by organizations that lack the resources for a full facility
class ISR. This is in sharp contrast to current ISR designs which are
all unique and expensive instruments. A network of such low cost ISR
systems would also be much more powerful collectively than any
individual instrument. This coordinated operation is easily enabled
through the use of a uniform design based on Software Radar
technology. The Zenith Incoherent Profiler will be a key element of a
planetary network for monitoring the Earth's Ionosphere.