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A GPS-based method to model the plasma effects in VLBI observations
,
E. Ros, J. M. Marcaide, J. C. Guirado, E. Sardón, & I.I. Shapiro
Astronomy & Astrophysics, submitted (1999)
- Abstract
Global Positioning System (GPS) satellites broadcast at frequencies
of 1,575.42 MHz (L1) and of 1,227.60 MHz (L2).
The dispersive property of
the ionosphere can be used to combine independent measurements
at the two frequencies to estimate
the total electron content (TEC) between a GPS receiver
site and a broadcasting satellite. Such measurements, made at
sites near to Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)
sites, can be used to estimate the
ionospheric contribution to VLBI observables.
For our 1991.9 astrometric VLBI experiment in which we obtained
group-delay observations in the 8.4 and 2.3 GHz bands simultaneously, we
found that the GPS and VLBI determinations of the ionosphere delays
agreed with root-mean-square differences below
0.15 ns for intercontinental baselines and 0.10 ns for continental
ones. We also
successfully applied the GPS-based procedure
to reduce the ionospheric effect in phase delays used for high
precision differenced astrometry at 8.4 GHz for this same experiment.
Eduardo Ros
ros@mpifr-bonn.mpg.de