Elimination of superimposed Multipath effects on Scintillations index on solar quiet ionosphere at Low Latitude over the Kenyan Airspace from a lone Positioned SCINDA system
Date
2010Author
Olwendo, O.J
Baki, P
Mito, C
Type
PresentationLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In communication involving links between satellites and
ground stations the most serious effects on transionospheric
radio signals is scintillation. By using
satellite Navigation Systems such as Global Position
System (GPS) receivers, we can probe the structure of
electron density in the ionosphere and thus monitor
scintillation of trans-ionospheric signals along the line of
signal path in real time. In this study we show that for
alone positioned navigation system such as the SCINDA
system in Nairobi, multipath errors arising from satellites
tracked at lower elevation angles can contribute
significantly to radio scintillation rather than the
ionospheric conditions along the signal path. Multipath
errors inflate the scintillation values and falsely indicate
ionospheric scintillation activity. For a quiet ionosphere,
scintillation is proportional to the signal path and
elevation angle of the satellite being tracked. By using
data for the entire solar quiet period of 2009 (January-
September), we created a fitting of the data to calibrate
the multipath effects as outliers in the data at lower
elevation. A separate plot for these outliers was then
generated for every satellite track against elevation angles
between 10 and 20 degrees