International Reference
Ionosphere (IRI) Workshop 2011
Report/ Dieter Bilitza
The 2011 IRI Workshop was hosted by the Space Science Directorate of the
South African National Space Agency (SANSA), SANSA Space Science, formerly the Hermanus
Magnetic Observatory (HMO), in Hermanus, South Africa. The meeting took place
from October 10 to 14, 2011 and was attended by 60 participants representing 20
countries including a sizable group of attendees from African countries (16
representing 7 countries). The special emphasis of the 2011 workshop was on
improving IRI over the African Region. The 65 presentations were grouped into
sessions on IRI in the African Sector: Topside Ionosphere: Storm-Time and
Real-Time IRI; F Peak Height and Density; TEC and related Parameters; The
Ionosphere and IRI During the Recent Solar Minimum; Lower Ionosphere; Inputs
for IRI; IRI Applications; and Final Discussions. The workshop has received
financial support from COSPAR, URSI, NSF, SANSA, Cape Town Routes Unlimited,
and the Overstrand Municipality.
The meeting provided an excellent opportunity to
review the many IRI-related science and educational activities in Africa and to
focus on shortcomings of the IRI model over this large and important longitude
sector. Most of the research activities reported at this meeting were based on
ionospheric parameters deduced from ionosonde and GPS measurements. But there
were also important contributions that relied on satellite sounder and in situ
measurements including data from the older Alouette and ISIS topside sounders
and from the more recent TIMED and C/NOFS satellites. It became quite clear
that additional work is needed to more accurately represent the African zone
and particular the Equatorial Ionization Anomaly (EIA) region in IRI.
An important event during this workshop was the
presentation of the latest version of the IRI model, IRI-2012 (Bilitza, USA).
This new version includes several improvements and new additions: (1) A better
representation of the bottomside electron density profile based on the work of
Altadill, Blanch, and Torta (Spain) with a large volume of worldwide ionosonde
data; (2) A better representation of the profile of molecular ion composition
in the bottomside ionosphere based on normalizing the photochemistry from the
FLIP model with the IRI electron density (Richards and Bilitza, USA); A new
model for the electron temperature that now accounts also for solar activity
variations based on a large volume of insitu measurements (Truhlik, Bilitza,
and Triskova, Czech Republic and USA); Inclusion of auroral boundaries and
their movement with magnetic activity based on the TIMED/GUVI model of Zhang
and Paxton (USA); Adding a model describing storm effects in the E region based
on TIMED/SABER data (Mertens, USA); Using the latest model version for the Earths
magnetic field (International Geomagnetic Reference Field, IGRF-11) and the
Earths atmosphere (NRL-MSIS-00 model of Picone and Drob, USA); Inclusion of Corrected
Geomagnetic Coordinates (CGM) (Papitashvili, USA) and of several additional
solar indices: F10.7 daily, 81-day, 12-month running mean, and PF10.7. Workshop
participants received a beta version of the IRI-2012 Fortran code and will help
to test the new code before it is officially released later in the year.
Storm-time conditions and the quality of IRI
predictions were studied in a number presentations based on ionosonde
measurements (Buresova, Czech Republic; Oyeyemi, Nigeria; Pietrella, Italy;
Pezzopane, Italy; Ngwira, South Africa; Cherniak, Ukraine). The need for a
Real-Time IRI (IRI-RT) becomes very clear from these presentations. A possible
approach was presented by Galkin (USA) assimilating data from the digisonde
network into IRI (GIRO). But most storm-modeling is so far limited to the F2
peak density, although it is clear that the peak height (hmF2) is also severely
affected by the storm (Buresova; Ngwira). A first step towards a better
representation of hmF2 in IRI was presented by Altadill (Spain) who introduced
a global model for the quiet-time hmF2 based on a large volume of values scaled
from ionograms. This is an important improvement because in the current IRI
hmF2 is obtained indirectly through its relationship with the propagation
factor M(3000)F2 also scaled from ionograms.
The talks presented at this meeting made use of
a number of data sources including ionosondes, GPS, COSMIC, ISIS, ISS-b,
Hinotori, CHAMP, C/NOFS, TIMED, Demeter, and DMSP. Like in earlier workshops
ionosondes were the prime data sources including data from African stations (McKinnell,
Mbambo, Sessanga, South Africa; Oyeyemi, Nigeria; Ahoua, Ivory Coast), European
stations (Buresova; Altadill; Pietrella; Mosert; Bilitza), Argentine and
Antarctic stations (Mosert; Gularte), Chinese stations (Wang; Shi), Indian
stations (Srinivas), Brazilian stations (de Souza and Bilitza) and Thai
stations (Wichaipanich; Kenpankho). Studies of spread-F occurrence over
Thailand (Wichaipanich) and over China (Shi) are bearing promise for a future
extension of the IRI spread-F model from currently the Brazilian longitude
sector to a global model. Another widely used data source were GPS-TEC
measurements including data from ground receivers located in China (Wang; Shi),
Argentina (Mosert), Russia (Zakharenkova) and in several African countries
(Olwendo, Kenya; Ochieng, Kenya; Okoh, Nigeria; Mbambo, South Africa; Cilliers,
South Africa). The data were used to evaluate IRI over the respective region
and to point out times and regions were improvements are needed. Tomographic
techniques have evolved to the point were they can help to get information for
the IRI peak and profile models (Chartier, UK). The IGS IONO group continues
its role as main liaison between the GPS and IRI community and as producer of
the definitive GPS TEC maps and new products like the ROTI index (Krankowski,
Poland). New initiatives in Argentina bear great potential for future inputs to
IRI modeling (Gularte, Argentina) including the Argentine Network for the Study
of the Upper Atmosphere (RAPEAS) and the Argentina Ionospheric Radar Experiment
Station (AIRES).
An important topic was the investigation of IRI
performance during the recent very low and extended solar maximum using
ionosonde data (Fuller-Rowell; Bilitza; Buresova), C/NOFS data (Klenzing, USA),
and GPS TEC (Cherniak; Cilliers). Since there is good agreement at the F-peak,
the discrepancy found above the peak with C/NOFS and CHAMP satellite
measurements must be due to an overestimation in IRI of hmF2 and/or the topside
shape. CHAMP and C/NOFS data will
help to introduce the required improvements into IRI.
The IRI team continues its involvement and
support of international science unions.
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
and the International Union of Radio Science (URSI) have asked the IRI team to
help facilitate the science transfer from URSI studies to ITU recommendations.
IRI was invited to present the IRI F-peak mapping status and plans at the ITU-R
meeting in Genve in October 17-21, 2011 (Reinisch, USA). IRI is also actively
involved in efforts by the International Standardization Organization (ISO) to
establish ISO standards for the Near-Earth space environment. The IRI-ISO
standard document has now been sent out to the international ionosphere
community for review (Bilitza, USA and Gulyaeva, Russia).
Papers from the 2009 IRI Workshop in Kagoshima,
Japan have now been published in a first issue of Earth, Planets, and Space
(EPS, Volume 63, Number 4, 2011) and a second special EPS issue will be
published soon. A special issue of Advances in Space Research is in preparation
with the presentation from the IRI session during the 2010 Scientific Assembly
of the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR). The IRI group has submitted a
session proposal for the 2012 COSPAR meeting in Mysore, India (July 16-21), which
now has been approved. The session will be on Global and Regional
Representation of Ionospheric Peak Parameters for Space Weather Applications.
For its 2013 Workshop the IRI community has been invited to the University of
Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland with A. Krankowski as the local organizer.
Two new members were elected to join the IRI Working Group: Patrick Sibanda
(University of Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia), and Jiankui Shi (Center for Space
Science and Applied Research, CAS, Beijing, China).
The workshop was expertly organized by the SANSA
team led by Lee-Anne McKinnell; John Bosco Habarulema
deserves a special mention for his untiring support of participants needs before
and throughout the workshop week from pick-up at the airport to drop-off. The
little seaside town of Hermanus fully lived up to its title as one of the
worlds prime location for whale sightings. An excursion to the Hemel en Aarde Valley near Hermanus with food pairing and
dinner at local wineries convinced the attendees that the valley carries its
name rightfully, Heaven on Earth. The Executive Mayor of the Overstrand
Municipality Nicolle Botha-Guthrie and SANSA CEO Dr.
Sandile Malinga welcomed the delegates at the dinner reception.