Research papers of the week – May 27, 2024

GNSS signal ray-tracing algorithm for the simulation of satellite-to-satellite excess phase in the neutral atmosphere

Adam Cegła; Witold Rohm; Gregor Moeller; Paweł Hordyniec; Estera Trzcina; Natalia Hanna
Journal of Geodesy

Ministerial score = 140.0
Journal Impact Factor (2023) = 4.4 (Q1)

journal-of-geodesy.jpgTraditionally, GNSS space-based and ground-based estimates of tropospheric conditions are performed separately. It leads to limitations in the horizontal (e.g., a single space-based radio occultation profile covers a 300 km slice of the troposphere) and vertical resolution (e.g., ground-based estimates of troposphere conditions have spacing equal to stations’ distribution) of the tropospheric products. The first stage to achieve an integrated model is to create an effective 3D ray-tracing algorithm for the satellite-to-satellite (radio occultation) path reconstruction. We verify the consistency of the simulated data with the RO observations from the Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere, and Climate (COSMIC-1) Data Analysis and Archive Center (CDAAC) in terms of excess phase and bending angle. The results show that our solution provides an effective RO excess phase, with a relative error varying from 35% at the height of 25–30 km (1.0–1.5 m) to 0.5% at heights 5–10 km (0.1–1 m) and 14 to 2% at heights below 5 km (2–14 m). The bending angle retrieval on simulated data attained for high-resolution ray-tracing, bias lower than 2% with respect to the observed bending angle. The optimal solution takes about 1 s for one transmitter–receiver pair with a tangent point below 5 km altitude. The high-resolution processing solution takes 3 times longer.

DOI:10.1007/s00190-024-01847-0

 

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