Probing Fine-Scale Ionospheric Structure with the Very Large Array Radio Telescope
A.S. Cohen (NRL), H.J.A. R\"ottgering (Leiden Observatory)

TL;DR
This study uses VLA radio telescope data to measure and analyze small-scale ionospheric structures by examining differential refraction of celestial sources, revealing diurnal and elevation-dependent variations in TEC gradients.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method for probing ionospheric structure at fine spatial scales using astronomical calibration data from the VLA Low-frequency Sky Survey.
Findings
Ionospheric spatial variations are larger during the day.
Elevation effects on ionospheric refraction are predictable and can be modeled.
Diurnal variations impact larger spatial scales more significantly.
Abstract
High resolution (~1 arcminute) astronomical imaging at low frequency (below 150 MHz) has only recently become practical with the development of new calibration algorithms for removing ionospheric distortions. In addition to opening a new window in observational astronomy, the process of calibrating the ionospheric distortions also probes ionospheric structure in an unprecedented way. Here we explore one aspect of this new type of ionospheric measurement, the differential refraction of celestial source pairs as a function of their angular separation. This measurement probes variations in the spatial gradient of the line-of-sight total electron content (TEC) to 0.001 TECU/km accuracy over spatial scales of under 10 km to over 100 km. We use data from the VLA Low-frequency Sky Survey (VLSS; Cohen et al. 2007, AJ 134, 1245), a nearly complete 74 MHz survey of the entire sky visible to the…
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