Annales Geophysicae (May 2013)

GPS phase scintillation and proxy index at high latitudes during a moderate geomagnetic storm

  • P. Prikryl,
  • R. Ghoddousi-Fard,
  • B. S. R. Kunduri,
  • E. G. Thomas,
  • A. J. Coster,
  • P. T. Jayachandran,
  • E. Spanswick,
  • D. W. Danskin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/angeo-31-805-2013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31
pp. 805 – 816

Abstract

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The amplitude and phase scintillation indices are customarily obtained by specialised GPS Ionospheric Scintillation and TEC Monitors (GISTMs) from L1 signal recorded at the rate of 50 Hz. The scintillation indices S4 and σΦ are stored in real time from an array of high-rate scintillation receivers of the Canadian High Arctic Ionospheric Network (CHAIN). Ionospheric phase scintillation was observed at high latitudes during a moderate geomagnetic storm (Dst = −61 nT) that was caused by a moderate solar wind plasma stream compounded with the impact of two coronal mass ejections. The most intense phase scintillation (σΦ ~ 1 rad) occurred in the cusp and the polar cap where it was co-located with a strong ionospheric convection, an extended tongue of ionisation and dense polar cap patches that were observed with ionosondes and HF radars. At sub-auroral latitudes, a sub-auroral polarisation stream that was observed by mid-latitude radars was associated with weak scintillation (defined arbitrarily as σΦ Φ > 0.1 rad and DPR > 2 mm s−1, both mapped as a function of magnetic latitude and magnetic local time, are very similar.