Abstract

The ionospheric total electron content (TEC) response during the St. Patrick's Day geomagnetic storm of 2015 (max Kp = 8) is an interest of study in the field of space weather since it is the strongest geomagnetic storm of Solar Cycle 24. The cause of this storm is a coronal mass ejection (CME) from the Sun on 15 Mar 2015 recorded by SOHO/LASCO and arrived at ~ 05:00 UT 17 Mar 2015. The CME speed is estimated at ~ 668 km/s. At the initial phase of the storm, the disturbance storm time (Dst) index rose from 15 nanoteslas nT at 03:21–56 nT at 05:31 UT. The main phase of the storm caused the Dst index to drop to the minimum value of –223 nT from 05:31–22:33 UT on 17 Mar 2015. In the Philippine-Taiwan sector, TEC during the main phase was enhanced by ~ 25 TECU on 10 GNSS receiver stations and was depleted afterward with a maximum depletion of ~ 33 TECU on PBAS. The recovery phase showed a TEC depletion on all stations for the whole day. The minimum dTEC (differential TEC) is observed at PBAS (Basco, Batanes, Philippines), and the maximum percent depletion is observed at TWTF (Taoyuan, Taiwan) during the early hours of photoionization. Results from this study verified that GNSS TEC measurements along Asian sectors dropped significantly during St. Patrick's geomagnetic storm.

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