Inhaltsbereich
Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 17955)
By using the CHAllenge Minisatellite Payload
(CHAMP) radio occultation (RO) data, a description of different
types of the ionospheric impacts on the RO signals
at the altitudes 30–90 km of the RO ray perigee is given
and compared with the results of measurements obtained
earlier in the satellite-to-Earth communication link at frequency
1.5415 GHz. An analytical model is introduced for
describing propagation of radio waves in a stratified medium
consisting of sectors with spherically symmetric refractivity
distribution. This model gives analytical expressions for
the phase, bending angle, and refractive attenuation of radio
waves and is applied to the analysis of radio wave propagation
phenomena along an extended path including the atmosphere
and two parts of the ionosphere. The model explains
significant amplitude and phase variations at altitudes 30–
90 km of the RO ray perigee and attributes them to inclined
ionospheric layers. Based on this analytical model, an innovative
technique is introduced to locate layers in the atmosphere
and ionosphere. A necessary and sufficient criterion is
obtained for a layer to be located at the RO ray perigee. This
criterion gives both qualitative and quantitative estimation of
the displacement of an ionospheric and/or atmospheric layer
from the RO ray perigee. This is important, in particular,
for determining the location of wind shears and directions of
the internal wave propagation in the lower ionosphere, and,
possibly, in the atmosphere.
(2012): Identification and localization of layers in the ionosphere using the eikonal and amplitude of radio occultation signals. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 5, 1, 1-16.
(2012): Identification and localization of layers in the ionosphere using the eikonal and amplitude of radio occultation signals. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 5, 1, 1-16.

