Siple Station

Siple Station, Antarctica, was established in 1973 to perform experiments that actively probed the magnetosphere using very low frequency (VLF) waves. Its location was selected because it had four necessary characteristics:

1. The thick ice sheet at Siple allowed the construction of a 21.2 km dipole antenna with a relatively high efficiency. With a 100 kW source, the antenna could obtain radiated powers on the order of 1 kW, which was necessary for stimulating wave-particle interactions in the magnetosphere.

2. Siple's magnetic conjugate point was easily accessible (Quebec, Canada).

3. Siple, at L = 4.3, was close to the plasmapause, where wave-particle resonances were likely to occur at the transmitted frequencies.

4. Siple could be operated year-round. [1]

Between 1973 and 1978, Siple operated with a transmitter known as Zeus. The Zeus transmitter could operate at one frequency at a time at powers up to 100kW. In 1978, the transmitter was replaced by the Jupiter transmitter, which could operate at multiple frequencies simultaneously and 150kW. In 1986, a second dipole antenna was added to explore polarization effects [2]. The Siple experiment ceased operation after the Antarctic summer of 1988.

Two receiving stations were operated during the Siple experiment. The first was located at Roberval, Quebec. The gradual northwesterly drift of Siple's conjugate point due to the secular variation of the geomagnetic field and the increasing interference from local power lines required the movement of the receiver to Lake Mistissini, Quebec during the later years of operation.

References

1.R . A. Helliwell and J . P . Katsufrakis, Upper Atmosphere Research in Antarctica, Chapter 5, Controlled Wave-Particle Interaction Experiments, pp. 100-129, Number 29 in the Antarctic Research Series . American Geophysical Union, 1978.

2. R . A. Helliwell, "Vlf wave stimulation experiments in the magnetosphere from Siple Station, Antarctica," Review of Geophysics, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 551-578, August 1988.

Siple Records

Logs - Logs of Transmitter Operations

Packages - Transmission Packages

Formats - Transmission Formats