Abstract

We present an analysis of ionospheric irregularities at high latitudes during the 2015 St. Patrick’s Day storm. Our study used measurements from ~2700 ground-based GPS stations and GPS receivers onboard five low earth orbit (LEO) satellites—Swarm A, B and C, GRACE and TerraSAR-X—that had close orbit altitudes of ~500 km, and the Swarm in situ plasma densities. An analysis of the rate of TEC index (ROTI) derived from LEO–GPS data, together with Swarm in situ plasma probe data, allowed us to examine the topside ionospheric irregularities and to compare them to the main ionospheric storm effects observed in ground-based GPS data. We observed strong ionospheric irregularities in the topside ionosphere during the storm’s main phase that were associated with storm-enhanced density (SED) formation at mid-latitudes and further evolution of the SED plume to the polar tongue of ionization (TOI). Daily ROTI maps derived from ground-based and LEO–GPS measurements show the pattern of irregularities oriented in the local noon–midnight direction, which is a signature of SED/TOI development across the polar cap region. Analysis of the Swarm in situ plasma measurements revealed that, during the storm’s main phase, all events with extremely enhanced plasma densities (>106 el/cm3) in the polar cap were observed in the Southern Hemisphere. When Swarm satellites crossed these enhancements, degradation of GPS performance was observed, with a sudden decrease in the number of GPS satellites tracked. Our findings indicate that polar patches and TOI structures in the topside ionosphere were predominantly observed in the Southern Hemisphere, which had much higher plasma densities than the Northern Hemisphere, where SED/TOI structures have already been reported earlier. LEO–GPS data (ROTI and topside TEC) were consistent with these results.

Highlights

  • Global navigation satellite systems (GNSSs), such as GPS and GLONASS, have become a very powerful and wellproved tool for ionosphere diagnostics, both in quiet and in disturbed geomagnetic conditions, because of their global, continuous and permanent measurements and expanding networks of ground-based receivers

  • Comparison of ground‐based and low earth orbit (LEO)–GPS diurnal rate of TEC index (ROTI) maps Figure 3 presents a comparison of diurnal ROTI maps derived from ground-based GPS permanent stations and LEO–GPS measurement for the Northern and Southern Hemispheres

  • In this study, we have compared the pattern of ionospheric irregularities derived from ground-based GPS measurements with daily ROTI maps constructed from multi-satellite LEO–GPS data

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Summary

Introduction

Global navigation satellite systems (GNSSs), such as GPS and GLONASS, have become a very powerful and wellproved tool for ionosphere diagnostics, both in quiet and in disturbed geomagnetic conditions, because of their global, continuous and permanent measurements and expanding networks of ground-based receivers. Cherniak and Zakharenkova Earth, Planets and Space (2016) 68:136 in the high latitude cause phase and amplitude fluctuations of GPS signals and have extensively been studied using ground-based GPS data (Skone and Cannon 1995; Mitchell et al 2004; Alfonsi et al 2011; Watson et al 2011; Jiao et al 2013; Prikryl et al 2013, 2014; Tiwari et al 2013; Cherniak et al 2014; Jacobsen and Andalsvik 2016). If we use only ground-based GPS data, it is difficult to determine the altitudinal range where the observed ionospheric irregularities occur and develop. These limitations mean that ground-based GPS observations cannot be used to answer the questions of when and where high-latitude topside ionospheric plasma irregularities are developed, or the physical mechanisms of their origin

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