Title of article
Ionospheric climatology derived from GPS occultation observations made by the ionospheric occultation experiment Original Research Article
Author/Authors
P.R. Straus، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
10
From page
793
To page
802
Abstract
The Ionospheric Occultation Experiment (IOX) is a GPS occultation sensor with an ionospheric mission focus. IOX measurements of GPS L1 and L2 carrier phase during Earth limb views of setting GPS satellites are used together with the Abel transform to determine vertical profiles of electron density from which F-region peak parameters are determined. Data from a four and a half month period beginning in November 2001 are statistically binned and compared with a climatological model. To account for potential errors in interpretation that could arise from violation of the Abel transform assertion of spherical symmetry, the data are compared to both the climatology and to statistics of simulated ionospheric inversions using the climatological model. General characteristics of the climatology are reproduced by the occultation data. However, several significant discrepancies between the model and the data are observed during this near-solar maximum time period. In particular, average mid-latitude daytime densities are shown to be higher than the climatological prediction and the height of F2 layer in the post-sunset equatorial region is underestimated by up to 150 km.
Keywords
Ionosphere , Climatology , Occultation
Journal title
Advances in Space Research
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Advances in Space Research
Record number
1131511
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