ESA title

GNSS Radio Occultation

A GNSS satellite goes behind the Earth’s limb (the thin glowing “halo” of atmosphere around the edge) as seen from a satellite in low earth orbit (LEO); the signal passes tangentially through the atmosphere and is refracted (bent, delayed). What is measured is the change in phase, delay and bending angle along this grazing path from which vertical profiles of atmospheric and ionospheric gases can be deduced.