WAAS SCINTILLATION CHARACTERIZATION Session 2B Global Effects on GPS/GNSS

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WAAS SCINTILLATION CHARACTERIZATION Session 2B Global Effects on GPS/GNSS Presented by: Eric Altshuler Date: Authors: Eric Altshuler: Karl Shallberg: Zeta Associates BJ Potter: LS technologies SEQUOIA RESEARCH CORPORATION

Purpose Characterize scintillation observed in WAAS from solar cycle 24 Characterize frequency of occurrence and system performance Investigate geographic spatial extent of scintillation events in Auroral region 2

Data Set 3

WAAS Reference Station Data Processing Purpose of processing was to associate loss of L1 or L2 signal tracking or cycle slip detections to scintillation Needed to identify and remove similar effects such as RF interference, satellite glitches, multipath, station obstructions, comm. outages etc. From a WAAS point of view, having a cycle slip is very similar to losing a signal, because our CNMP (noise sigma) curve is reset to the maximum value Processing utilized individual station data (AGC, ranging data), comparisons across threads, and comparisons across entire network Output of processing was L1 and L2 outages (seconds of lost tracking) for one station/satellite pair, as well as dual frequency cycle slip related outages (details in the paper) 4

Equatorial vs. Auroral Behavior Directional dependence (Azimuth / Elevation) Boundary regions with respect to mid-latitude Time series over entire 4.0 year data set NOTE: Equatorial in this sense means furthest south, to the point that a station can sample the equatorial anomaly. There are no WAAS stations actually in the equatorial region. 5

Scintillation Outages for L2 Multi-directional Pointing South 6

Behavior tied to magnetic latitude, not geographic latitude, which is to be expected Cutoff values look like about 26 and 63 for the two regions Four primary contributors in Auroral region Three primary contributors in Equatorial region 7

Black line is 28 day average daily cycle slips Single station HNL (Hawaii) Several periods of time where all activity drops to almost nothing 8

Black line is 28 day average daily cycle slips Single station BRW (Barrow, North Alaska) Cycle Slip Activity never drops completely to zero 9

Black line is 28 day average daily cycle slips Green line is detrended Ap data Cycle Slip Activity aligned with ionospheric trends 10

Regional Analysis Spatial and temporal analysis conducted to assess size and frequency of events Analysis of instantaneous events does not show significant correlation, as many events are close in time, but do not happen at exact same epoch Windowing of cycle slip indications from particular geographic regions conducted to assess correlation and geographic extent of scintillation events Two pieces of analysis were conducted with the windowed data Correlated Satellite Outages Geographic Spatial Extent 11

Auroral NW (7) Auroral NE (4) Mexico (7) 12

Hour into Day 13

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Maximum number of stations affected is 6 Maximum number of satellites affected is 10 16

Satellites Impacted Statistics generated for entire data set by applying ten minute windowing Required at least two stations were lost for this analysis Three levels of satellite impacts considered At least one satellite affected At least three satellites affected At least six satellites affected Total number of days in entire data set for each level is computed and histogrammed Data is further broken down by number of stations affected for day Time series over whole 4.0 year data set shown on next slide 17

One satellite impacted for ~34% of the days (as well as two stations) Six satellites impacted for ~20% of the days 18

Much fewer days for the Auroral NE region, but the behavior is the same 19

Mexican region showed very different behavior. The region never has six satellites impacted over the entire 4 years of data Mexican region has the same number of stations as the Auroral Northwest region 20

Conclusions for Correlated SVs Scintillation in Auroral Regions impacts multiple satellites at multiple stations almost simultaneously Impact to one satellite virtually implies impact to three Impact to one satellite creates ~50% chance of impacting six satellites Auroral Northwest region appears to have a much higher rate of scintillation than the Auroral Northeast Mexican region satellite loss histogram shows much different behavior Impact to one satellite does not imply impacting three satellites 21

Spatial Extent Analysis Spatial extent of scintillation in Auroral region implied by cycle slip indications on multiple satellites/stations at nearly the same time Convex hull algorithm / triangulation algorithm creates an estimate of the area of the event Short study on different time windows conducted and showed 10 minutes was sufficient to capture majority of events Using data that was instantaneous did not yield significant sizes of scintillation events Example for July 15 th, 2012 shown in subsequent slides 22

Geographic Area Computation For some period of time, compute the Ionospheric Pierce Points (IPPs) at 350 km. above the surface of the earth Select the IPPs which form the convex hull (CH) of the set Compute the median latitude and longitude of the CH Project the points to the surface of the earth in ECEF Compute the areas of the (three dimensional) triangles and sum Two Hours of data 23

Time window lags by a particular amount of time, and the maximum area for the particular date is computed an plotted Twice the area of Alaska Area of Alaska 24

Conclusions Multiple satellites impacted across multiple stations nearly simultaneously across Auroral Regions Detection of one satellite having cycle slip indications virtually guarantees multiple satellites will be impacted Auroral Northwest appears to be most active scintillation region for the WAAS service volume Geographic extent of scintillation events in Auroral Northwest region can be very large, exceeding the area of the state of Alaska on several occasions Other studies have shown that WAAS is robust, and WAAS coverage is only affected by scintillation in a minor way Results are potentially helpful for future WAAS processing improvements 25

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Appendix Data processing 27

Paper Outline DATA SET WAAS REFERENCE STATION DATA PROCESSING EQUATORIAL VS AURORAL BEHAVIOR SCINTILLATION CORRELATED WITH SPACE WEATHER SATELLITE OUTAGE STATISTICS (BY REGION) GEOGRAPHIC SPATIAL EXTENT ANALYSIS 28

Geographic Regions Auroral NW Auroral NE Mexico Barrow Iqaluit Tapachula Kotzebue Goose Bay San Juan Fairbanks Gander Merida Bethel Winnipeg Mexico City Anchorage Puerto Vallarta Cold Bay San Jose Cabo Juneau Miami Next three slides show the affect of a ten minute windowing algorithm for the Auroral Northwest, July 15 th, 2012 29

Culling Care taken to remove incidents which are most likely not scintillation. RFI events are flagged using processing of receiver L1 and L2 AGC gain Periods of time where more than four stations are not tracking a single satellite are assumed to be a satellite issue Azimuth / Elevation windows for particular stations which show repeatable patterns are assumed to be from line of site blockage 30

Processing Overview Processing performed on WAAS measurement data to associate missing measurements with loss of tracking from scintillation activity Processing differentiates scintillation from RFI, network disruptions, satellite maintenance etc.. Results contain epoch, PRN, Azimuth, Elevation for each station and frequency number, sorted by week Currently using A thread only (other two redundant threads at each station not processed) Output contains instances of lost tracking not attributed to other sources Mask angle used in processing is 20 degrees (lost tracking below this elevation not considered) Additional culling utilized to remove events that clearly are not scintillation Data set spans a little more than two years, starting on January 2 nd 2011 and continuing to present day (August 24 th, 2013) Currently 138 weeks (~2.6 years) 31

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July 15 th, 2012 38