Abstract
Radio interferometers used to make astronomical observations, such as
the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR), experience distortions imposed upon the
received signal due to the ionosphere as well as those from instrumental
errors. Calibration using a well-characterised radio source can be used
to mitigate these effects and produce more accurate images of
astronomical sources, and the calibration process provides measurements
of ionospheric conditions over a wide range of length scales. The basic
ionospheric measurement this provides is differential Total Electron
Content (TEC, the integral of electron density along the line of sight).
Differential TEC measurements made using LOFAR have a precision of
<1 mTECu and therefore enable investigation of ionospheric
disturbances which may be undetectable to many other methods. We
demonstrate an approach to identify ionospheric waves from these data
using a wavelet transform and a simple plane wave model. The noise
spectra are robustly characterised to provide uncertainty estimates for
the fitted parameters. An example is shown in which this method
identifies a wave with an amplitude an order of magnitude below those
reported using GNSS TEC measurements. Artificially generated data are
used to test the accuracy of the method and establish the range of
wavelengths which can be detected using this method with LOFAR data.
This technique will enable the use of a large and mostly unexplored
dataset to study travelling ionospheric disturbances over Europe.