Abstract

The ionospheric mapping function (IMF) is fundamental in retrieving total electron content (TEC) from observations on board low earth orbiting (LEO) satellites, as well as the receiver differential code bias (DCB) estimation. Most IMFs apply the assumption that the electron density field is spherical symmetric, only dependent on the elevation angle of signal ray path without considering the azimuthal diversity. However, the ionospheric horizontal asymmetry may introduce large mapping errors in slant to vertical TEC conversion or vice versa especially at low elevation angles. This study investigates the variations of the horizontal gradients in the topside ionosphere and plasmasphere, and proposes a formalism for parametrizing the time, location, elevation and azimuth angle dependent horizontal gradients based on the Global Core Plasma Model (GCPM). Several parameters are estimated to represent the north-to-south, east-to-west asymmetric patterns of slant TEC and the horizontal mapping factor with varying elevation angle. Results show the empirical model of the horizontal gradients are well constructed and contribute positively to reducing the mapping error of vertical TEC. The root-mean-square error (RMS) at all elevation angles are decreased to 0.5 TECU and 1.0 TECU under low and high solar activity conditions respectively. This approach is potential to be used in the absolute GNSS/LEO TEC and DCB estimation and topside ionosphere/plasmasphere exploration.

Full Text
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