Effects of Equatorial Plasma Bubbles on Multi-GNSS Signals: A Case Study over South China

Author:

Han Hao1ORCID,Zhong Jiahao12ORCID,Hao Yongqiang1,Wang Ningbo3,Wan Xin124ORCID,Huang Fuqing45ORCID,Li Qiaoling6,Song Xingyan1,Chen Jiawen1,Wang Kang7,Tang Yanyan1,Ou Zhuoliang1,Du Wenyu1

Affiliation:

1. Planetary Environmental and Astrobiological Research Laboratory (PEARL), School of Atmospheric Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University, Zhuhai 519082, China

2. Key Laboratory of Tropical Atmosphere-Ocean System, Ministry of Education, Zhuhai 519082, China

3. Aerospace Information Research Institute (AIR), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Beijing 100094, China

4. Mengcheng National Geophysical Observatory, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China

5. CAS Key Laboratory of Geospace Environment, School of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China

6. School of Petroleum, China University of Petroleum-Beijing at Karamay, Karamay 834000, China

7. Shanghai Radio Equipment Research Institute, Shanghai 201109, China

Abstract

Equatorial plasma bubbles (EPBs) occur frequently in low-latitude areas and have a non-negligible impact on navigation satellite signals. To systematically analyze the effects of a single EPB event on multi-frequency signals of GPS, Galileo, GLONASS, and BDS, all-sky airglow images over South China are jointly used to visually determine the EPB structure and depletion degree. The results reveal that scintillations, or GNSS signal fluctuations, are directly linked to EPBs and that the intensity of scintillation is positively correlated with the airglow depletion intensity. The center of the airglow depletion often corresponds to stronger GNSS scintillation, while the edge of the bubble, which is considered to have the largest density gradient, corresponds to relatively smaller scintillation instead. This work also systematically analyzes the responses of multi-constellation and multi-frequency signals to EPBs. The results show that the L2 and L5 frequencies are more susceptible than the L1 frequency is. For different constellations, Galileo’s signal has the best tracking stability during an EPB event compared with GPS, GLONASS, and BDS. The results provide a reference for dual-frequency signal selection in precise positioning or TEC calculation, that is, L1C and L2L for GPS, L1C and L5Q for Galileo, L1P and L2C for GLONASS, and L1P and L5P for BDS. Notably, BDS-2 is significantly weaker than BDS-3. And inclined geosynchronous orbit (IGSO) satellites have abnormal data error rates, which should be related to the special signal path trajectory of the IGSO satellite.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Project of Stable Support for Youth Team in Basic Research Field, CAS

Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation

Joint Open Fund of Mengcheng National Geophysical Observatory

USTC Research Funds of the Double First-Class Initiative

Opening Funding of Chinese Academy of Sciences dedicated for the Chinese Meridian Project

Publisher

MDPI AG

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