Abstract

Drifting ionospheric electron density irregularities may lead to the scintillation of transionospheric radio waves, as in the case of signals broadcast from artificial satellites. Scintillations can not only degrade signal quality but also cause receiver loss of lock on GNSS satellites, therefore posing a major threat to GNSS based applications demanding high levels of accuracy, availability and integrity. The problem is particularly acute in Latin America and will be further amplified with the next solar maximum, expected to occur in the 2012-2014 time frame. The CIGALA (Concept for Ionospheric Scintillation Mitigation for Professional GNSS in Latin America) project, led by Septentrio N.V. and cofunded by the European GNSS Supervisory Authority (GSA) through the European 7th Framework Program, will tackle this problem. The aim of the CIGALA project is to develop ionospheric scintillation mitigation countermeasures to be implemented in Septentrio's professional multi frequency multi-constellation GNSS receivers, to be tested in Latin America. The project will leverage research and development activities coordinated between European and Brazilian experts and will involve a wide scale ionospheric measurement and test campaigns that will be conducted in Brazil with the support of several local academic and industrial partners. The overall strategy adopted and the current status of the project is presented and preliminary results discussed.

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