
Seismoionospheric GPS total electron content anomalies observed before the 12 May 2008 M w 7.9 Wenchuan earthquake
Author(s) -
Liu J. Y.,
Chen Y. I.,
Chen C. H.,
Liu C. Y.,
Chen C. Y.,
Nishihashi M.,
Li J. Z.,
Xia Y. Q.,
Oyama K. I.,
Hattori K.,
Lin C. H.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: space physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2008ja013698
Subject(s) - tec , epicenter , total electron content , ionosphere , global positioning system , cosmic cancer database , geology , geodesy , seismology , physics , geophysics , astrophysics , telecommunications , computer science
The global ionospheric map (GIM) is used to observe variations in the total electron content (TEC) of the global positioning system (GPS) associated with 35 M ≥ 6.0 earthquakes that occurred in China during the 10‐year period of 1 May 1998 to 30 April 2008. The statistical result indicates that the GPS TEC above the epicenter often pronouncedly decreases on day 3–5 before 17 M ≥ 6.3 earthquakes. The GPS TEC of the GIM and electron density profiles probed by six microsatellites of FORMOSAT3/COSMIC (F3/C) are further employed to simultaneously observe seismoionospheric anomalies during an M w 7.9 earthquake near Wenchuan, China, on 12 May 2008. It is found that GPS TEC above the forthcoming epicenter anomalously decreases in the afternoon period of day 6–4 and in the late evening period of day 3 before the earthquake, but enhances in the afternoon of day 3 before the earthquake. The spatial distributions of the anomalous and extreme reductions and enhancements indicate that the earthquake preparation area is about 1650 km and 2850 km from the epicenter in the latitudinal and longitudinal directions, respectively. The F3/C results further show that the ionospheric F 2 peak electron density, N m F 2 , and height, h m F 2 , significantly decreases approximately 40% and descends about 50–80 km, respectively, when the GPS TEC anomalously reduces.