MISA is a broad-based observatory capable of addressing a wide range of
atmospheric science investigations. The incoherent scatter radar facility at Millstone Hill has been supported by the
National Science Foundation since 1974 for studies of the Earth's
upper atmosphere and
ionosphere. During this time the facility has evolved from a part-time research operation sharing radar cooling and power supply elements with the M.I.T.
Lincoln Laboratory Millstone satellite tracking radar, to a separately funded, operationally independent system dedicated to upper atmospheric research. The scientific capability of the Millstone Hill facility was greatly expanded in 1978 with the installation of a fully steerable 46 meter antenna to complement the 67 meter fixed
zenith pointing dish. The favorable location of Millstone Hill at sub-auroral latitudes combined with the great operational range afforded by the steerable antenna permit observations over a latitude span encompassing the region between the
polar cap and the near-
equatorial ionosphere. Since 1982 the Haystack Observatory Atmospheric Sciences Group has been supported for operating the Millstone Hill research radar as a part of the incoherent scatter radar chain and for associated studies of the
auroral and sub-auroral ionosphere and
thermosphere. The meridional radar chain extends from
Sondrestrom Upper Atmospheric Research Facility in
Kangerlussuaq,
Greenland through Millstone Hill at mid-latitudes, beyond
Arecibo at low latitudes, to the
Jicamarca facility at the magnetic equator in
Peru. The radar chain forms an integral part of the NSF-supported CEDAR (
Coupling, Energetics, and Dynamics of Atmospheric Regions) observing network and Millstone Hill observations and analysis have contributed extensively to the successes of the CEDAR initiative. ==Scatter technique==