high-order ionospheric effects on electron density estimation from fengyun-3c gps radio occultation
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2017
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GPS radio occultation can estimate ionospheric electron density
and total electron content (TEC) with high spatial resolution, e.g., China's
recent Fengyun-3C GPS radio occultation. However, high-order ionospheric
delays are normally ignored. In this paper, the high-order ionospheric
effects on electron density estimation from the Fengyun-3C GPS radio
occultation data are estimated and investigated using the
NeQuick2 ionosphere model and the IGRF12 (International Geomagnetic Reference Field,
12th generation) geomagnetic model. Results show that the high-order
ionospheric delays have large effects on electron density estimation with up
to 800 el cm−3, which should be corrected in high-precision
ionospheric density estimation and applications. The second-order ionospheric
effects are more significant, particularly at 250–300 km, while third-order
ionospheric effects are much smaller. Furthermore, the high-order ionospheric
effects are related to the location, the local time, the radio occultation
azimuth and the solar activity. The large high-order ionospheric effects are
found in the low-latitude area and in the daytime as well as during strong
solar activities. The second-order ionospheric effects have a maximum
positive value when the radio occultation azimuth is around 0–20°,
and a maximum negative value when the radio occultation azimuth is around
−180 to −160°. Moreover, the geomagnetic storm also affects the
high-order ionospheric delay, which should be carefully
corrected.
Reference Key |
li2017annaleshigh-order
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Authors | ;J. Li;J. Li;S. Jin;S. Jin |
Journal | journal of food measurement and characterization |
Year | 2017 |
DOI | 10.5194/angeo-35-403-2017 |
URL | |
Keywords |
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