Speaker
Anthony McCaffrey
(University of New Brunswick)
Description
The Canadian High Arctic Ionospheric Network (CHAIN) [1] includes Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers capable of sampling specific observables at very high rates, up to 100 Hz. With these high rate observables, 100 Hz Total Electron Content (TEC), and Rate of TEC index (ROTI), can be calculated. This study outlines the methods and limitations of calculating both relative and absolute 100 Hz TEC, specifically from the observables provided by the Septentrio PolaRxS Pro GPS. Spectral analyses of the high rate TEC and ROTI is also presented, determining whether important results can be obtained within the higher frequency data. The expected hardware noise is predicted to aid in the determination of important results in the data, in an attempt to extract ionospheric information from possible sources of noise.
[1] Jayachandran, P. T., R. B. Langley, J. W. MacDougall, S. C. Mushini, D. Pokhotelov, A. M. Hamza, I. R. Mann, D. K. Milling, Z. C. Kale, R. Chadwick, T. Kelly, D. W. Danskin, and C. S. Carrano (2009), The Canadian high arctic ionospheric network (CHAIN), Radio Sci., 44, RS0A03, doi:10.1029/2008RS004046, 2009.
Author
Anthony McCaffrey
(University of New Brunswick)
Co-author
Jayachandran Thayyil
(University of New Brunswick)