Systematic study of ionospheric scintillation over the indian low-latitudes during low solar activity conditions
Deepthi Ayyagari, Abhirup Datta, Sumanjit Chakraborty

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes ionospheric scintillation over Indian low-latitudes during low solar activity, using NavIC and GPS data to understand scintillation dynamics and their distribution patterns.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of low-latitude ionospheric scintillation during low solar activity using NavIC and GPS observations, including distribution modeling.
Findings
Scintillation onset times are around 19:30-20:30 LT.
NavIC signals follow Nakagami-m and α-μ distributions during scintillation.
Good correlation of scattering coefficients during quiet conditions.
Abstract
A systematic study of ionospheric scintillation at the low-latitudes, especially around the Equatorial Ionization Anomaly (EIA) and the magnetic equator, is essential in understanding the dynamics of ionospheric variation and related physical processes. Our study involves NavIC observations over Indore and Hyderabad. Additionally, GPS observations over Indore were analyzed, under disturbed as well as quiet time ionospheric conditions from September 2017 through 2019, falling in the declining phase of the solar cycle 24. The observations were further analyzed using proxy parameters: ROT and ROTI. These results have been obtained from three satellites of the NavIC constellation (PRNs 2, 5, and 6). The onset times of scintillations \textbf{were} observed to be around 19:30 LT (h) and 20:30 LT (h) for Hyderabad and Indore respectively, while the peak…
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