by M.Sithartha Muthu Vijayan and K.Shimna
Ionospheric perturbations induced by tsunamis and earthquakes can be used for tsunami early warning and remote sensing of earthquakes, provided the perturbations are characterized properly to distinguish them from the ones caused by other sources. The ionospheric perturbations are increasingly being obtained from Global Positioning System (GPS) based Total Electron Content (TEC) measurements sampled at uniform time intervals. However, the sampling is not uniform in space. The nonuniform spatial sampling along the GPS satellite tracks introduces aliasing if it is not accounted while computing the ionospheric perturbations. All the methods hitherto used to detect the co-seismic and tsunamigenic ionospheric perturbations did not account the nonuniform spatial sampling while computing these perturbations. In addition, the residual approach used to obtain the perturbations by detrending the TEC time series using high-order polynomial fit introduces artifacts. These aliasing and artifacts corrupt amplitude, Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), phase, and frequency of ionospheric perturbations which are vital to distinguish the perturbations induced by tsunamis and earthquakes from the rest. We show that Spatio-Periodic Leveling Algorithm (SPLA) successfully removes such aliasing and artifacts. The efficiency of SPLA in removing the aliases and artifacts is validated under two simulated scenarios, and using GPS observations carried out during two natural disasters – the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami and the 2015 Nepal-Gorkha earthquake. We, further, studied the severity of aliasing and artifacts on co-seismic and tsunamigenic perturbations by analyzing its characteristics employing SNR, spatiotemporal, and wavelet analyses. The results reveal that removal of aliasing and artifacts using SPLA i) increases the SNR up to ∼149% compared to the residual method and ∼39% compared to the differential method, ii) distinctly resolves signals from sharp static variations, and iii) detects 50% more co-seismic ionospheric perturbations and 25% more tsunami-induced ionospheric perturbations in the two events studied. Cross-correlation of the perturbation time series obtained using the residual method and SPLA reveals that aliasing and artifacts shift the time of occurrence by −7.64 minutes to +4.21 minutes. Further, the results show that the SPLA efficiently detects the ionospheric perturbations at low elevation angles, thereby removes the need of applying elevation cut-off and increases the area of ionospheric exploration of a GPS receiver.
Source : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asr.2021.10.040
by Rani Devi, K. C. Gouda & S. Lenka
The extreme temperature events are a concern in recent years due to climate variability particularly in India as there is an increase in the temperature intensity, frequency, and duration. This study represents stationary temperature-duration-frequency (TDF) analysis over two mega cities in India Delhi (north) and Bengaluru (south) using the daily maximum temperatures at meteorological stations for the period 1969–2016 observed by India Meteorological Department (IMD).The interannual variability of maximum temperature and the maximum daily recorded value indicates the increasing trend in both the cities. The study investigates the extreme analysis of the maximum temperature using two distributions, i.e., Gumbel’s Extreme Value Type 1 (GEVT) and Log Pearson Type III (LPT), for return periods 2, 5, 10, 25, 50, and 100 years at both the locations and the positive temporal trend is observed. The TDF curves were build using annual maximum temperature values for total 8 durations (different days) of 48 years analyzed and results show the increasing trend of maximum temperature at lower duration and high return period values. The TDF is also used for prediction of the maximum temperature for the 2 hottest years in India, i.e., 2012 and 2015, and it is comparable with the observed maximum temperature. Similarly, the predictions for 11 years, i.e. 2006 to 2016, over both the cities are simulated using both the GEVT-I and LPT-III and the models have better potential skill in predicting the extreme maximum temperature. These results can be useful for the sectors like health, energy, agriculture, urban management, and ecology management and can help the policy decision makers and disaster managers in the mitigation and adoption steps to face the extreme temperature disaster at city scale.
Source: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00704-021-03824-5