The refractive and diffractive contributions to GPS signal scintillation at high latitudes during the geomagnetic storm on 7–8 September 2017
Different indices have been used to reflect, or monitor the ionospheric scintillation, e.g. the detrended carrier phase, σ φ , S 4 , the rate of change of the vertical total electron content index ( v ROTI), as well as the ionosphere‐free linear combination (IFLC) of two carrier phases. However, few...
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Published in | Journal of space weather and space climate Vol. 12; p. 40 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
EDP Sciences
01.01.2022
|
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Different indices have been used to reflect, or monitor the ionospheric scintillation, e.g. the detrended carrier phase,
σ
φ
,
S
4
,
the rate of change of the vertical total electron content index (
v
ROTI), as well as the ionosphere‐free linear combination (IFLC) of two carrier phases. However, few studies have been performed to investigate the refractive and diffractive contributions to these indices, especially during geomagnetic storms. In this study, we analyze the high-resolution (50 Hz) phase and amplitude measurements from four high-latitude stations in Svalbard, Norway during the geomagnetic storm on 7–8 September 2017. Our results show that at high latitudes, the high-pass filter with a standard cutoff frequency of 0.1 Hz sometimes cannot effectively remove the refraction-driven phase variations, especially during the geomagnetic storm, leading to a remaining refraction contribution to the detrended carrier phase and
σ
φ
when scintillation happens. In the meanwhile, as
v
ROTI is sensitive to the TEC gradients, regardless of small- or large-scale ionospheric structures, both refraction and diffraction effects can cause visible fluctuations of
v
ROTI. For most of the scintillation events, the phase indices (including detrended carrier phase,
σ
φ
, and
v
ROTI), IFLC
,
and
S
4
show consistent fluctuations, indicating that diffraction usually occurs simultaneously with refraction during scintillation. One interesting feature is that although the IFLC and
S
4
are thought to be both related to the diffraction effect, they do not always show simultaneous correspondence during scintillations. The IFLC is enhanced during the geomagnetic storm, while such a feature is not seen in
S
4
. We suggest that the enhanced IFLC during the geomagnetic storm is caused by the increased high-frequency phase power, which should be related to the enhanced density of small-scale irregularities during storm periods. |
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ISSN: | 2115-7251 2115-7251 |
DOI: | 10.1051/swsc/2022036 |