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Physics PhD student wins four major awards for papers on GPS technology

Physics doctoral student Panagiotis Vergados (MSc '06) has found a new technique for improving the聽precision of global positioning systems (GPS) dual-frequency signals聽鈥 and won four national and international awards in three years for papers detailing how.

Vergados developed this technique聽to get more accurate readings of the Earth鈥檚 thermal structure.

It was designed for satellite-to-satellite GPS signals but works just as well in ground-to-satellite GPS used by the average driver.

Left: Panagiotis Vergados

Atmospheric scientists like Vergados estimate atmospheric parameters聽鈥 pressure, density and temperature 鈥 by analyzing GPS signals received by low Earth-orbiting (LEO) satellites聽orbiting聽inside the Earth鈥檚 ionosphere.

As GPS signals enter the ionosphere聽鈥 the Earth鈥檚 uppermost layer聽鈥撀爋n their way to the LEO satellite, the signals bend and accelerate. Scientists routinely correct for this聽effect when analyzing the signals for atmospheric parameters.

But they don鈥檛 bother correcting the second-order ionospheric effect 鈥 that of聽the Earth鈥檚 magnetic field on the GPS signal traversing the Earth's ionosphere. 鈥淚t is a bit cumbersome to trace the signal and have knowledge both of the magnetic field and electron content at every point along its trajectory,鈥 says Vergados.

No longer. The 28-year-old Vergados has found a simpler way to factor in this second-order ionospheric correction聽that results in more accurate atmospheric readings.

He applied the Faraday rotation聽phenomenon, a radio-astronomical technique used to calculate magnetic signals coming from galaxies, to resolving the second-order ionospheric correction in the GPS signals. 鈥淚 said to myself, why not give it a try and maybe the Faraday would work better.鈥 It did.

To make the Faraday technique work in retrieving more accurate atmospheric data from GPS signals, Vergados had to design three聽algorithms. He has presented each one in three separate and award-winning research papers, two of which have already been published in scientific journals.

鈥淥ne would be good, but three is very good鈥 for a doctoral student, says a proud Vergados, who hopes to graduate this coming academic year.

The first paper was "Bending angle retrieval algorithms using COSMIC mission observations". It won the national Best Student Paper Award in Geodesy at the Canadian Geophysical Union (CGU) conference in Banff, Alta., in 2008.

The second was 鈥淪tudying the effect of GPS radio occultation bending angle variations on the retrieval process of dry atmospheric temperature profiles: A sensitivity analysis鈥. It won third place in the international Best Student Research Paper competition at the fourth in Boulder, Colorado in 2009. (COSMIC is a constellation of six micro-satellites orbiting the Earth at about 800 kilometres)

The third was titled 鈥淎 new technique in retrieving Total Electron Content and second-order ionospheric delays in radio occultation experiments using GPS鈥. It won two awards 鈥撀 鈥 presented earlier this month in Ottawa at the 2010 (CMOS-CGU). The congress had over 1,000 registrants, and Vergados was competing against 10 to 15 students across Canada.

Judges must have been not only impressed with the groundbreaking content but with his easy-to-understand presentation, says Vergados.

Left: Panagiotis Vergados聽(right) accepts his 2010 CMOS-CGU prizes, with聽Spiros Pagiatakis,聽his PhD supervisor and CGU president

鈥淭he topic is completely new and I am one of the few students in Canada who works in this kind of research.鈥

Not bad for a PhD student in physics who grew up in Greece and only came to Canada seven years ago.

Vergados earned a bachelor of science in physics from the University of Ioannina in Greece in 2003. At a wine and cheese reception at the university, the Canadian ambassador approached him and his friends and suggested they聽attend a workshop on graduate studies in Canada. For a lark, he applied to 91亚色. Meanwhile, he found a聽graduate position聽in Germany鈥檚 Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics and planned to go to school there聽鈥 until 91亚色 accepted him. Before he could say no, his Canadian-born mother had packed his bags and bought him a ticket to Toronto. He could speak English and聽had family here.

By 2006, Vergados had a master of science.聽For the past four years, under the supervision of Spiros Pagiatakis, a professor of geomatics engineering in 91亚色鈥檚 , he has been working on his PhD. He expects to graduate next year and is already scouting around for a post-doc fellowship at national research centres and universities in Canada.

Vergados has no intention of returning to Greece. 鈥淚鈥檓 glad I came to 91亚色.鈥

Republished courtesy of YFile鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.