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Layperson bio: I look at electric currents in space using a constellation of satellites. Scientist bio: I’m an STFC Ernest Rutherford Fellow in the Solar and Space Group at Northumbria University working on Birkeland currents using AMPERE. My pronouns are he/him.
Websitehttps://www.johncoxon.co.uk/

I was always really bad at having work-specific social media accounts, so now that Astrodon is closing, I think migrating is probably the wrong choice for me!

For professional social media, I’m moderately active on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/jccoxon/ and I’m also on ResearchGate at https://www.researchgate.net/profile/John-Coxon, or you can check out my website at https://johncoxon.co.uk.

I’m active in a personal capacity at @johncoxon. I’m also on Bluesky; you can follow me over there or at @johncoxon.bsky.social.

Chris Scott and I chatted about his talk at Spring MIST and as a result he has very kindly included me on a lovely paper about long-term ionospheric trends in the F1 and F2 layers. It’s currently in review, and because it's submitted to Annales Geophysicae, you can participate in the process! Link here: https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2023/egusphere-2023-2599/

Gratuitous diagram to make people look 😉

#Preprint #Ionosphere #SpaceWeather #ClimateChange

Calibrating estimates of ionospheric long-term change

Abstract. Long-term change in the height of the ionospheric F2 layer, hmF2, is predicted to result from increased levels of tropospheric greenhouse gases. Sufficiently long sequences of ionospheric data exist to investigate this long-term change, recorded by a global network of ionosondes. However, direct measurements of ionospheric layer height with these instruments is not possible. As a result, most estimates of hmF2 rely on empirical formulae based on parameters routinely scaled from ionograms. Estimates of trends in hmF2 using these formulae show no global consensus. We present an analysis in which data from the Japanese ionosonde station at Kokubunji were used to estimate monthly median values of hmF2 using an empirical formula. These were then compared with direct measurements of the F2 layer height determined from Incoherent Scatter measurements made at the Shigaraki MU observatory, Japan. Our results reveal that the formula introduces diurnal, seasonal and long-term biases in the estimates of hmF2 of ≈ ±10 % (±25 km an altitude of 250 km). These can be explained by the presence of underlying F1 layer ionisation not accounted for in the formula. We demonstrate, that for Kokobunji, the ratio of F2/F1 peak electron concentrations is strongly controlled by changes in geomagnetic activity represented by the am index. Changes in thermospheric composition in response to geomagnetic activity have been shown to be highly localised. We conclude that localised changes in thermospheric composition modulate the F2/F1 peak ratio, leading to differences in hmF2 trends. We further conclude that the influence of thermospheric composition on the underlying ionosphere needs to be accounted for in these empirical formulae if they are to be applied to studies of long-term ionospheric change.

This is how I’m spending my Thursday! Should be exciting?
Anyone else having issues uploading an image to their #AGU23 abstract? It just does not want to work for me.

Wheeeeeee we're Hugo finalists again! Huge congratulations to @bohemiancoast and @futuriana who are finalists in Best Fan Artist, huge congratulations to @johncoxon who’s a finalist with Journey Planet in Best Fanzine, and of course congratulations to transatlantic besties and cocky cake-makers @hugogirlpodcast. We also discuss the Locus and the BSFA Awards, plus (of course) picks. Listen here! https://octothorpe.podbean.com/e/87-we-didn-t-imagine-the-third-option/

#HugoAwards #ScienceFiction #Worldcon #ChengduWorldcon #Podcast

87: We Didn’t Imagine the Third Option | Octothorpe

John isn’t picky, Alison is in a field, and Liz is very hungry. Please email your letters of comment to [email protected] and tag @OctothorpeCast (on Twitter or on Mastodon) when you post about the show on social media. Content warnings this episode: None Letters of comment Abigail Nussbaum Chris Garcia Karen Schaeffer Malcolm Hutchison Peter Sullivan Raj We might have Tweets of comment but who knows? Chengdu is a shower Moar Hugo award delays Now you see them, now you don’t This episode will go live when the Hugo finalists do Locus awards From Locus #750: “The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi won with the smallest winning lead this year, just 17 points ahead Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel, which had the most votes and first-place votes, and would have won without the doubling of subscriber points.” Scalzi’s grumpy tweet BSFA awards Non-fiction is split into short and long Novella Collection Original audio fiction Translated work of short fiction Picks John: Across the Spider-Verse Not Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman Alison: Museum Catalogues (In the Black Fantastic and Science Fiction: Voyage to the Edge of Imagination) Liz: Stealing From the Sky by Adam Roberts In the style of Donald Westlake Credits Cover art: “One Moose-Sized Alison” by first-time Hugo Finalist Alison Scott Alt text: John and Liz stand in front of a moose-sized Alison wearing antlers in a cage fight. Alison is saying “BEWARE MY SIGNATURE MOVE THE MOOSE”, John is saying “I THOUGHT THIS WAS SUPPOSED TO BE THE SUMMER OF FUN” and Liz is saying “IS IT TOO LATE TO PICK 100 ALISON-SIZED MOOSE?” The words “Octothorpe 87” are at the top. Theme music: “Surf Shimmy” by Kevin MacLeod (CC BY 4.0)

Pleased the Southampton astro group has made the news! Even more pleased the supernova group found something interesting and it turned out to be an AGN :p https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-65571309
Astronomers detect largest cosmic explosion ever seen

Astronomers have discovered what they believe to be the largest explosion ever detected.

BBC News
The new(ish) #AGU reference style means that authors with the same surname but different initials get their initials when cited in the text. So in theory, you could have a sentence like “The moon is bigger than the Earth (A. W. Smith, 2013; W. H. Smith, 1974)”. However, the way they’ve implemented it effectively means you get a lot of this sort of thing: “It is well-known that butterflies are made of bees (G. Wilkins, 1990; G. J. Wilkins, 1999; G. Wilkins, 2008)”. It just looks kinda silly.
I am at #SpringMIST after an early train journey! Jonathan Eastwood just gave a great overview of upcoming L5 mission Vigil, and now @mathewjowens is talking about reduced-physics solar wind modelling (which I’m assuming isn’t just a cheat to do less work).
I'm visiting #UCLA #IGPP this week to work with James Weygand on equivalent ionospheric currents and spherical elementary current systems. I always love playing with new data – writing classes, plotting routines, etc. – and it's a fun trip so far!
Has anyone here ever given a talk to an #IOP #InstituteOfPhysics group? How did you pitch your talk? I am giving one at the #LitAndPhil soon and need to work out how best to go about it.