Abstract

Ionosphere research using the Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) techniques is a hot topic, with their unprecedented high temporal and spatial sampling rate. We introduced a new GNSS Ionosphere Monitoring and Analysis Software (GIMAS) in order to model the global ionosphere vertical total electron content (VTEC) maps and to estimate the GPS and GLObalnaya NAvigatsionnaya Sputnikovaya Sistema (GLONASS) satellite and receiver differential code biases (DCBs). The GIMAS-based Global Ionosphere Map (GIM) products during low (day of year from 202 to 231, in 2008) and high (day of year from 050 to 079, in 2014) solar activity periods were investigated and assessed. The results showed that the biases of the GIMAS-based VTEC maps relative to the International GNSS Service (IGS) Ionosphere Associate Analysis Centers (IAACs) VTEC maps ranged from −3.0 to 1.0 TECU (TEC unit) (1 TECU = 1 × 1016 electrons/m2). The standard deviations (STDs) ranged from 0.7 to 1.9 TECU in 2008, and from 2.0 to 8.0 TECU in 2014. The STDs at a low latitude were significantly larger than those at middle and high latitudes, as a result of the ionospheric latitudinal gradients. When compared with the Jason-2 VTEC measurements, the GIMAS-based VTEC maps showed a negative systematic bias of about −1.8 TECU in 2008, and a positive systematic bias of about +2.2 TECU in 2014. The STDs were about 2.0 TECU in 2008, and ranged from 2.2 to 8.5 TECU in 2014. Furthermore, the aforementioned characteristics were strongly related to the conditions of the ionosphere variation and the geographic latitude. The GPS and GLONASS satellite and receiver P1-P2 DCBs were compared with the IAACs DCBs. The root mean squares (RMSs) were 0.16–0.20 ns in 2008 and 0.13–0.25 ns in 2014 for the GPS satellites and 0.26–0.31 ns in 2014 for the GLONASS satellites. The RMSs of receiver DCBs were 0.21–0.42 ns in 2008 and 0.33–1.47 ns in 2014 for GPS and 0.67–0.96 ns in 2014 for GLONASS. The monthly stability of the GPS satellite DCBs was about 0.04 ns (0.07 ns) in 2008 (2014) and that for the GLONASS satellite DCBs was about 0.09 ns in 2014. The receiver DCBs were less stable than the satellite DCBs, with a mean value of about 0.16 ns (0.47 ns) in 2008 (2014) for GPS, and 0.48 ns in 2014 for GLONASS. It can be demonstrated that the GIMAS software had a high accuracy and reliability for the global ionosphere monitoring and analysis.

Highlights

  • The ionosphere is part of the Earth’s atmosphere, ranging from 60 to 1000 km above the mean sea level

  • The experiments were supported by a new fast computing global ionosphere mapping software, GNSS Ionosphere Monitoring and Analysis Software (GIMAS), which was developed at the Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) Research Center of Wuhan University

  • The performance of the GIMAS-based Global Ionosphere Map (GIM) was validated with the products of the legacy International GNSS Service (IGS) Ionosphere Associated Analysis Centers (IAACs) (CODE, Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), European Space Agency (ESA)/European Space Operations Center (ESOC), and Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC)) and the Jason-2 altimeter data

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Summary

Introduction

The ionosphere is part of the Earth’s atmosphere, ranging from 60 to 1000 km above the mean sea level. It is a dispersive medium for the Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) operating in the microwave band. The GNSS techniques have become an effective type of continuous global scanner of the Earth’s ionosphere, with their unprecedented high temporal and spatial sampling rate [2,3,4,5]. In the context of the International GNSS Service (IGS), several IGS Ionosphere Associated Analysis Centers (IAACs) have developed different techniques in order to provide Global Ionosphere Maps (GIMs) of the vertical TEC (VTEC), since 1998 [5]. The GLObalnaya NAvigatsionnaya Sputnikovaya Sistema (GLONASS) data have been included for the operational ionosphere analysis since 2003

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