Abstract

Ionospheric irregularities can adversely affect the performance of Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS). However, this opens the possibility of using GNSS as an effective ionospheric remote sensing tool. Despite ionospheric monitoring has been undertaken for decades, these irregularities in multiple spatial and temporal scales are still not fully understood. This paper reviews Virginia Tech’s recent studies on multi-scale ionospheric irregularities using ground-based and space-based GNSS observations. First, the relevant background of ionospheric irregularities and their impact on GNSS signals is reviewed. Next, three topics of ground-based observations of ionospheric irregularities for which GNSS and other ground-based techniques are used simultaneously are reviewed. Both passive and active measurements in high-latitude regions are covered. Modelling and observations in mid-latitude regions are considered as well. Emphasis is placed on the increased capability of assessing the multi-scale nature of ionospheric irregularities using other traditional techniques (e.g., radar, magnetometer, high frequency receivers) as well as GNSS observations (e.g., Total-Electron-Content or TEC, scintillation). Besides ground-based observations, recent advances in GNSS space-based ionospheric measurements are briefly reviewed. Finally, a new space-based ionospheric observation technique using GNSS-based spacecraft formation flying and a differential TEC method is demonstrated using the newly developed Virginia Tech Formation Flying Testbed (VTFFTB). Based on multi-constellation multi-band GNSS, the VTFFTB has been developed into a hardware-in-the-loop simulation testbed with external high-fidelity global ionospheric model(s) for 3-satellite formation flying, which can potentially be used for new multi-scale ionospheric measurement mission design.

Highlights

  • Ionospheric irregularities are associated with the plasma density structures in the ionosphere and can severely impact the performance of various modern technologies such as satellite communication and Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Kintner et al (2007)

  • Summary This paper reviews the recent advances in the multi-scale ionospheric irregularity studies at Virginia Tech (VT) using groundbased and space-based GNSS observations

  • As descried in Section Passive measurements of high latitude ionospheric structure, four GNSS dual-band CASES receivers in the Adaptive Low-Power Instrument Platforms (AAL-PIP) were deployed along the 40° magnetic meridian chain and utilized to collect the ground-based GPS data for years in Antarctica

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Summary

Introduction

Ionospheric irregularities are associated with the plasma density structures in the ionosphere and can severely impact the performance of various modern technologies such as satellite communication and Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Kintner et al (2007). This is considered in Section Active measurement of high-latitude ionospheric structure and impacts on GNSS Another example recently considered is HF space weather radars that sense decameter scale irregularities, not typically thought to be associated with Fresnel-scale GNSS scintillations. The. AAL-PIP GPS receiver chain has been used to observe ionospheric irregularities (that led to GPS scintillation), as well as to capture Ultra Low Frequency (ULF) waves (that led to geomagnetic pulsations of GPS TEC) associated with geomagnetic storms (Kim et al 2014; Xu et al 2019). AAL-PIP GPS receiver chain has been used to observe ionospheric irregularities (that led to GPS scintillation), as well as to capture Ultra Low Frequency (ULF) waves (that led to geomagnetic pulsations of GPS TEC) associated with geomagnetic storms (Kim et al 2014; Xu et al 2019) These studies will be highlighted in Section Space weather observations. The binary raw GPS data transferred from the AAL-PIP system are converted into human-readable

MIT madrigal GPS TEC data
GPS TEC in TECU a
Spectral power
Natural orbits
STK visualization system
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