The influence of ionospheric thin shell height on TEC retrieval from GPS observation

We investigate the influence of assumed height for the thin shell ionosphere model on the Total Electron Content(TEC) derived from a small scale Global Positioning System(GPS) network. TEC and instrumental bias are determined by applying a grid-based algorithm to the data on several geomagnetically...

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Published inResearch in astronomy and astrophysics Vol. 16; no. 7; pp. 143 - 152
Main Authors Wang, Xiao-Lan, Wan, Qing-Tao, Ma, Guan-Yi, Li, Jing-Hua, Fan, Jiang-Tao
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published National Astronomical Observatories of Chinese Academy of Sciences and IOP Publishing 01.07.2016
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ISSN1674-4527
2397-6209
2397-6209
DOI10.1088/1674-4527/16/7/116

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Summary:We investigate the influence of assumed height for the thin shell ionosphere model on the Total Electron Content(TEC) derived from a small scale Global Positioning System(GPS) network. TEC and instrumental bias are determined by applying a grid-based algorithm to the data on several geomagnetically quiet days covering a 10 month period in 2006. Comparisons of TEC and instrumental bias are made among assumed heights from 250 km to 700 km with an interval of 10 km. While the TEC variations with time follow the same trend, TEC tends to increase with the height of the thin shell. The difference in TEC between heights 250 km and 700 km can be as large as~8 TECU in both daytime and nighttime. The times at which the TEC reaches its peak or valley do not vary much with the assumed heights. The instrumental biases, especially bias from the satellite, can vary irregularly with assumed height. Several satellites show a large deviation of~3 ns for heights larger than 550 km. The goodness of fit for different assumed heights is also examined. The data can be generally well-fitted for heights from 350 km to 700 km. A large deviation happens at heights lower than 350 km. Using the grid-based algorithm, there is no consensus on assumed height as related to data fitting. A thin shell height in the range 350-500 km can be a reasonable compromise between data fitting and peak height of the ionosphere.
Bibliography:11-5721/P
We investigate the influence of assumed height for the thin shell ionosphere model on the Total Electron Content(TEC) derived from a small scale Global Positioning System(GPS) network. TEC and instrumental bias are determined by applying a grid-based algorithm to the data on several geomagnetically quiet days covering a 10 month period in 2006. Comparisons of TEC and instrumental bias are made among assumed heights from 250 km to 700 km with an interval of 10 km. While the TEC variations with time follow the same trend, TEC tends to increase with the height of the thin shell. The difference in TEC between heights 250 km and 700 km can be as large as~8 TECU in both daytime and nighttime. The times at which the TEC reaches its peak or valley do not vary much with the assumed heights. The instrumental biases, especially bias from the satellite, can vary irregularly with assumed height. Several satellites show a large deviation of~3 ns for heights larger than 550 km. The goodness of fit for different assumed heights is also examined. The data can be generally well-fitted for heights from 350 km to 700 km. A large deviation happens at heights lower than 350 km. Using the grid-based algorithm, there is no consensus on assumed height as related to data fitting. A thin shell height in the range 350-500 km can be a reasonable compromise between data fitting and peak height of the ionosphere.
Radiowave propagation Ionospheric TEC Ionospheric height GPS observation Instrumental bias
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ISSN:1674-4527
2397-6209
2397-6209
DOI:10.1088/1674-4527/16/7/116