DocumentCode
134549
Title
GPS Ionospheric Scintillation and Total Electron Content during partial solar eclipse in Malaysia
Author
Ya´acob, Norsuzila ; Hasbullah, Wan Muhammad Faizhaqimi Wan ; Azmi, Nor Farhana ; Yusof, Azita Laily ; Jusoh, Mohamad Huzaimy
Author_Institution
Fac. of Electr. Eng., Univ. Teknol. MARA, Shah Alam, Malaysia
fYear
2014
fDate
7-9 March 2014
Firstpage
276
Lastpage
281
Abstract
The most famous and known effects of space weather is fluctuation in the amplitude and phase radio signal that propagates in the ionosphere. This fluctuation is also known as scintillation which will intense, degrades the signal quality, reduce the information content, or cause failure of the signal reception. During solar eclipse day, there are some fluctuations to the signal received by GPS (Global Positioning System). The analysis of fluctuation can be used to predict the behavior of ionosphere during solar eclipse. The phenomenon in solar activity which is solar eclipse will occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby totally or partially obscuring the image of the Sun for the viewers on Earth. Scintillation at the ionosphere during the solar eclipse seems to be different compared to normal time. So, this research is mainly focuses on the effect of ionosphere corresponding to scintillation during solar eclipse. The method that will be used is analysing the GPS Ionospheric Scintillation and TEC Monitor (GISTM) data obtained from UKM Bangi station and Langkawi station using MATLAB. Before that, raw data that obtained from GISTM station will be converted into ASCII format using PARSEIM software. The result will be recorded in graph and tables to see the different of parameters value during solar eclipse happened and two days before and after it happened. The finding from this research is Total Electron Content (TEC) was decreasing when solar eclipse occurs as well as amplitude scintillation that also decreasing. Geographic storm and aurora were not one of the effect of solar eclipse.
Keywords
Global Positioning System; ionosphere; ionospheric electromagnetic wave propagation; radiowave propagation; solar eclipses; solar-terrestrial relationships; ASCII format; GISTM data; GISTM station; GPS Ionospheric Scintillation and TEC Monitor data; GPS ionospheric scintillation; Global Positioning System; Langkawi station; MATLAB; Malaysia; PARSEIM software; UKM Bangi station; amplitude fluctuation; amplitude scintillation; aurora; geographic storm; information content reduction; ionosphere behavior; partial solar eclipse; phase radio signal propagation; signal quality degradation; signal reception failure; solar activity; space weather; total electron content; Earth; Fluctuations; Global Positioning System; Ionosphere; Moon; Storms; Sun; Aurora; GPS Ionospheric Scintillation and TEC Monitor (GISTM); Geographic Storm; Global Positioning System (GPS); Scintillation; Total Electron Content (TEC);
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Signal Processing & its Applications (CSPA), 2014 IEEE 10th International Colloquium on
Conference_Location
Kuala Lumpur
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-3090-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CSPA.2014.6805764
Filename
6805764
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