
A New Frontier in Ionospheric Observations: GPS Total Electron Content Measurements From Ocean Buoys
Author(s) -
Azeem Irfan,
Crowley Geoff,
Forsythe Victoriya V.,
Reynolds Adam S.,
Stromberg Erik M.,
Wilson Gordon R.,
Kohler Craig A.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
space weather
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.254
H-Index - 56
ISSN - 1542-7390
DOI - 10.1029/2020sw002571
Subject(s) - gnss applications , tec , total electron content , ionosphere , global positioning system , satellite , space weather , environmental science , remote sensing , meteorology , equator , geology , geodesy , latitude , geography , geophysics , computer science , physics , telecommunications , astronomy
Ground‐based Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receivers have become a ubiquitous tool for monitoring the ionosphere. Total electron content (TEC) data from globally distributed networks of ground‐based GNSS receivers are increasingly being used to characterize the ionosphere and its variability. The deployment of these GNSS receivers is currently limited to landmasses. This means that 7/10 of Earth's surface, which is covered by the oceans, is left unexplored for persistent ionospheric measurements. In this paper, we describe a new low‐power dual‐frequency Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver, called Remote Ionospheric Observatory (RIO), which is capable of operating from locations in the air, space, and the oceans as well as on land. Two RIO receivers were deployed and operated from the Tropical Atmosphere Ocean buoys in the Pacific Ocean, and the results are described in this paper. This is the first time that GPS receivers have been operated in open waters for an extended period. Data collected between 1 September 2018 and 31 December 2019 are shown. The observed TEC exhibits a clear seasonal dependence characterized by equinoctial maxima in the data at both locations. Both RIO receivers, deployed near the magnetic equator, show an 18–35% increase in TEC during moderately disturbed geomagnetic periods. Comparisons with the International Reference Ionosphere model show good agreement. The new capability presented in this paper addresses a critical gap in our ability to monitor the ionosphere from the 70% of the Earth's surface that is covered by water.