Abstract

AbstractThe ionized upper portion of the atmosphere, the ionosphere, affects radio signals traveling between satellites and the ground. This degrades the performance of satellite navigation, surveillance, and communication systems. Techniques to measure and mitigate ionospheric effects and in particular to measure the total electron content (TEC) are therefore required. TEC is usually determined by analyzing the differential delay experienced by dual‐frequency signals. Here we demonstrate a technique which enables TEC to be derived using single‐frequency signals passing between geostationary satellites and terrestrial Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers. Geostationary satellites offer the key advantage that the raypaths are not moving and hence are easier to interpret than standard GPS TEC. Daily TEC time series are derived for three ground receivers from Europe over the year 2015. The technique is validated by correlation analysis both between pairs of ground receiver observations and between ground receivers and independent ionosonde observations. The correlation between pairs of receivers over a year shows good agreement. Good agreement was also seen between the TEC time series and ionosonde data, suggesting the technique is reliable and routinely produces realistic ionospheric information. The technique is not suitable for use on every GPS receiver type because drift in derived TEC values was observed for profiles calculated using receivers without links to highly stable clocks. The demonstrated technique has the potential to become a routine method to derive TEC, helping to map the ionosphere in real time and to mitigate ionospheric effects on radio systems.

Highlights

  • The ionosphere is the ionized region of the Earth’s atmosphere located at altitudes between approximately 80 and 1,000 km

  • Geostationary satellites offer the key advantage that the raypaths are not moving and are easier to interpret than standard Global Positioning System (GPS) total electron content (TEC)

  • One such system that is significantly affected by the ionosphere is the Global Positioning System (GPS), which operates at frequencies between 1.1 and 1.6 GHz

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Summary

Introduction

The ionosphere is the ionized region of the Earth’s atmosphere located at altitudes between approximately 80 and 1,000 km. We demonstrate a technique that allows a TEC time series to be derived using the single-frequency signals sent through the satellite-based augmentation system (SBAS) from geostationary satellites to ground-based receivers. Studies such as Hein et al (2016) have begun to investigate the use of single-frequency signal delays from nongeostationary satellites to estimate TEC.

Method
GPS Receiver Data
Ionosonde Data
The Impact of Clock Drift
Initial Evaluation of the Technique
Preliminary Inspection of Relative TEC Time Series
Analysis Between TEC Time Series
Ionosonde TEC to GPS TEC
Findings
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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