Predicting Equatorial Ionospheric Total Electron Content Using the Transformer-based Model with Observations From Ground GNSS Receivers and COSMIC-2 Satellites

Abstract

Ionospheric Total Electron Content (TEC) is a key parameter for monitoring and studying the ionosphere, which induces significant delays in radio signals. Equatorial ionospheric irregularities, such as Equatorial plasma bubbles (EPB), can severely disrupt satellite navigation and communication. Predicting TEC is, therefore, essential for space weather monitoring and high-precision positioning applications. This study employs a Transformer-based model to predict TEC 24 hours in advance for specific satellites based on observations from a ground station and COSMIC-2 satellites. Unlike other approaches, our model directly forecasts TEC values for visible satellites within predefined longitude-latitude ranges. To enhance predictive accuracy, we also integrate additional features: ionospheric pierce points (IPP), geomagnetic (HP60), and solar activity indices, utilizing time-series Transformer architecture, and we consider a long-short-term memory (LSTM) model as a baseline. The proposed approach provides promising results for local TEC forecasting in the specific coverage area, with potential for further enhancements using additional GNSS or TEC measurements.

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