A solar flare detector has been developed using the Global Positioning System (GPS) capabilities to monitor the ionospheric Total
Electron Content (TEC). It is based on obtaining the variation of the vertical TEC data with respect to the previous sidereal day and then, on performing a second order time difference to obtain the information of the instantaneous TEC changes. The detector can be applied looking for solar flares backwards or in real time as well. To make a first assessment of the solar flare detector, several specific days, when there is the certainty that a solar flare had occurred, have been analyzed. The results, which are presented in this work, have
been obtained from the X17.2 flare on 28th October, 2003, the X5.7 flare on 14th July, 2000 and the X7.1 flare on 20th January, 2005, using the GPS data of the International GNSS Service (IGS) network with a sampling rate of 30 s. The results obtained are compatible with the results presented previously by different authors, and with the flare records included in the Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellite (GOES) database. In addition, several receivers, located in the southern hemisphere and far from the geomagnetic
equator, detect a lower overionization amplitude than other receivers with similar mean solar zenith angle. Moreover, minor
disturbances in the TEC enhancement can also be observable and studied.Peer Reviewe