Artículos de revistas
A New Method for Ionospheric Tomography and Its Assessment by Ionosonde Electron Density, GPS TEC, and Single-Frequency PPP
Fecha
2019-05-01Registro en:
Ieee Transactions On Geoscience And Remote Sensing. Piscataway: Ieee-inst Electrical Electronics Engineers Inc, v. 57, n. 5, p. 2571-2582, 2019.
0196-2892
10.1109/TGRS.2018.2874974
WOS:000466183500009
6790708247598813
0000-0001-7648-1291
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Univ Politecn Cataluna
Univ Vale Paraiba
Institución
Resumen
A new tomographic method was developed with the main goal of mapping the ionosphere in the region of Brazil. The ionospheric background was estimated based on ionosonde and radio-occultation measurements to overcome the lack of data provided by climatological models in low-latitude regions. A new method of performing iterations of the conventional multiplicative algebraic reconstruction technique (MART) was also used in order to avoid nonilluminated cells and improve the spatial resolution. The quality assessment using independent ionosonde data during two weeks in 2013 showed a better performance of the proposed method in comparison to the international reference ionosphere, providing improvements of 31% for the F-layer peak height h(m) and 24% for the ionospheric peak of electron density N-m. The tomographic technique was also evaluated in the estimation of the total electron content (TEC) and in the single-frequency precise point positioning (PPP). Improvements of 59% in TEC and 31% in the single-frequency PPP were obtained in comparison to the results derived from global ionospheric maps. In addition, a better daily description of the ionosphere was obtained using the proposed method, where it was possible to detect the peak height increasing associated with the prereversal enhancement of the vertical plasma drift that occurs near sunset hours. The results reveal that the modified form of the MART tomographic technique can be considered a useful tool for technical and scientific communities involved in space weather, spatial geodesy, and telecommunications.