DATA ASSIMILATION FOR THE STUDY OF MAGNETOSPHERE-IONOSPHERE-ATMOSPHERE COUPLING
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Bath
Department Name: Electronic and Electrical Engineering
Abstract
State-of-the-art ionospheric imaging techniques use Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite data. In a similar manner to medical imaging, where the patient is examined by X-rays, in ionospheric imaging the upper atmosphere (ionosphere) is examined by radio waves. The next big step for ionospheric imaging is to combine it with models of the ionosphere. The reason to do this is to discover the underlying physics, which we cannot do very well by just looking at the images. We need to link the images to models of winds, solar radiation and electric fields in order to understand what causes the upper atmospheric environment to behave as it does during extreme events called storms. These are not the weather storms we are familiar with but rather these space-weather storms are caused by the bombardment of the outer realms of the atmosphere with particles and radiation from the Sun. The mathematics we need to link the measurements to the models is called data assimilation. Data assimilation has already been strikingly successful in meteorology. The data assimilation to be developed under this grant is for much higher up in the atmosphere (above 100 km) and will be used to investigate the coupling between the neutral and ionized atmosphere and to determine the relationships between ionosphere-atmosphere dynamics and magnetosphere dynamics.
Publications

Adewale A
(2012)
A study of L-band scintillations and total electron content at an equatorial station, Lagos, Nigeria
in Radio Science

Alfonsi L
(2018)
Analysis of the Regional Ionosphere at Low Latitudes in Support of the Biomass ESA Mission
in IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Alfonsi L
(2011)
GPS scintillation and TEC gradients at equatorial latitudes in April 2006
in Advances in Space Research

Alfonsi L
(2008)
Probing the high latitude ionosphere from ground-based observations: The state of current knowledge and capabilities during IPY (2007-2009)
in Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics

Alfonsi L
(2011)
Bipolar climatology of GPS ionospheric scintillation at solar minimum
in Radio Science

Alfonsi L
(2009)
Corrigendum to: "Probing the high latitude ionosphere from ground-based observations: The state of current knowledge and capabilities during IPY (2007-2009)"
in Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics


Allain D
(2008)
Ionospheric delay corrections for single-frequency GPS receivers over Europe using tomographic mapping
in GPS Solutions

Baumgardner J
(2013)
Imaging space weather over Europe
in Space Weather

Benton C
(2012)
New method for tracking the movement of ionospheric plasma
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics