Abstract

Abstract In order to study the coupling relationship between earthquakes and ionospheric disturbances, TEC data during the Mw 7.3 earthquake that occurred near Fukushima, Japan on March 16, 2022, were processed using global ionospheric data provided by the Center for Orbit Determination in Europe (CODE). In this paper, the sliding quartile interval method is used to eliminate solar activity in a 27-day window, including sunspot number (SSN), F10.7 cm radio flux (F10.7), total solar irradiation (TSI), solar wind velocity (Vsw) and geomagnetic activity. The impact of disturbance storm time index (DST) and global geomagnetic activity index (KP) on TEC anomaly disturbance can obtain more accurate TEC anomaly information. The results indicate that when the solar and geomagnetic activity cycles are inconsistent with the TEC anomalies on fifth day before the earthquake, the TEC anomalies above the epicenter are significantly greater than those observed in other regions, and the corresponding magnetic conjugate region is accompanied by anomalies, which is the characteristic of TEC anomalies caused by earthquakes. This means that the detected TEC anomalies can be used as a potential ionospheric precursors, indicating that the Fukushima earthquake is imminent.

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