Evaluating the performance of the Electron Density Assimilative Model (EDAM) in the Western European sector using modified Taylor diagrams
Abstract
The Electron Density Assimilative Model (EDAM) is an ionospheric model that assimilates data sources into a background model, currently provided by IRI2007, to generate a global, or regional, 3D representation of the ionospheric electron density. In this study, slant total electron content (sTEC) between GPS satellites and 43 ground receivers in Europe were assimilated into EDAM to model the ionospheric electron density over western Europe. For the evaluation of the model an additional ground receiver (the truth station) was considered, which was not used in the assimilation process. Slant total electron contents for this station were calculated through the EDAM model along satellite-to-receiver paths corresponding to those of the observations made by the receiver. The modelled and observed sTEC were compared for each satellite and every day, between September 2002 and August 2003. For the comparison standard deviations of the modelled and observed sTEC were determined. These were used in modified Taylor Diagrams to display the mean-removed rms difference between the model and observations, the correlation between the two data sets and the bias of the modelled data. Taylor diagrams were obtained for the entire year, and each season and month. Results of the comparisons are presented and discussed, with a specific interest in times that show increased rms differences and decreased correlations between the data sets. The effect of the satellite calibration biases on the results are also considered.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFMSA43A2637J
- Keywords:
-
- 2487 Wave propagation;
- IONOSPHERE;
- 6934 Ionospheric propagation;
- RADIO SCIENCE;
- 6964 Radio wave propagation;
- RADIO SCIENCE;
- 7944 Ionospheric effects on radio waves;
- SPACE WEATHER