A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America

An extensive study of the morphology and the dynamics of the equatorial ionosphere over South America is presented here. A multi parametric approach is used to describe the physical characteristics of the ionosphere in the regions where the combination of the thermospheric electric field and the hor...

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Main Author: Cesaroni, Claudio <1980>
Other Authors: Scotto, Carlo
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6889/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-68892015-06-30T04:48:37Z A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America Cesaroni, Claudio <1980> GEO/10 Geofisica della terra solida An extensive study of the morphology and the dynamics of the equatorial ionosphere over South America is presented here. A multi parametric approach is used to describe the physical characteristics of the ionosphere in the regions where the combination of the thermospheric electric field and the horizontal geomagnetic field creates the so-called Equatorial Ionization Anomalies. Ground based measurements from GNSS receivers are used to link the Total Electron Content (TEC), its spatial gradients and the phenomenon known as scintillation that can lead to a GNSS signal degradation or even to a GNSS signal ‘loss of lock’. A new algorithm to highlight the features characterizing the TEC distribution is developed in the framework of this thesis and the results obtained are validated and used to improve the performance of a GNSS positioning technique (long baseline RTK). In addition, the correlation between scintillation and dynamics of the ionospheric irregularities is investigated. By means of a software, here implemented, the velocity of the ionospheric irregularities is evaluated using high sampling rate GNSS measurements. The results highlight the parallel behaviour of the amplitude scintillation index (S4) occurrence and the zonal velocity of the ionospheric irregularities at least during severe scintillations conditions (post-sunset hours). This suggests that scintillations are driven by TEC gradients as well as by the dynamics of the ionospheric plasma. Finally, given the importance of such studies for technological applications (e.g. GNSS high-precision applications), a validation of the NeQuick model (i.e. the model used in the new GALILEO satellites for TEC modelling) is performed. The NeQuick performance dramatically improves when data from HF radar sounding (ionograms) are ingested. A custom designed algorithm, based on the image recognition technique, is developed to properly select the ingested data, leading to further improvement of the NeQuick performance. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Scotto, Carlo 2015-04-30 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6889/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic GEO/10 Geofisica della terra solida
spellingShingle GEO/10 Geofisica della terra solida
Cesaroni, Claudio <1980>
A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America
description An extensive study of the morphology and the dynamics of the equatorial ionosphere over South America is presented here. A multi parametric approach is used to describe the physical characteristics of the ionosphere in the regions where the combination of the thermospheric electric field and the horizontal geomagnetic field creates the so-called Equatorial Ionization Anomalies. Ground based measurements from GNSS receivers are used to link the Total Electron Content (TEC), its spatial gradients and the phenomenon known as scintillation that can lead to a GNSS signal degradation or even to a GNSS signal ‘loss of lock’. A new algorithm to highlight the features characterizing the TEC distribution is developed in the framework of this thesis and the results obtained are validated and used to improve the performance of a GNSS positioning technique (long baseline RTK). In addition, the correlation between scintillation and dynamics of the ionospheric irregularities is investigated. By means of a software, here implemented, the velocity of the ionospheric irregularities is evaluated using high sampling rate GNSS measurements. The results highlight the parallel behaviour of the amplitude scintillation index (S4) occurrence and the zonal velocity of the ionospheric irregularities at least during severe scintillations conditions (post-sunset hours). This suggests that scintillations are driven by TEC gradients as well as by the dynamics of the ionospheric plasma. Finally, given the importance of such studies for technological applications (e.g. GNSS high-precision applications), a validation of the NeQuick model (i.e. the model used in the new GALILEO satellites for TEC modelling) is performed. The NeQuick performance dramatically improves when data from HF radar sounding (ionograms) are ingested. A custom designed algorithm, based on the image recognition technique, is developed to properly select the ingested data, leading to further improvement of the NeQuick performance.
author2 Scotto, Carlo
author_facet Scotto, Carlo
Cesaroni, Claudio <1980>
author Cesaroni, Claudio <1980>
author_sort Cesaroni, Claudio <1980>
title A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America
title_short A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America
title_full A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America
title_fullStr A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America
title_full_unstemmed A multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over South America
title_sort multi-instrumental approach to the study of equatorial ionosphere over south america
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2015
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6889/
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