Availability of far ultraviolet observations of Earth’s dayglow by the NASA Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) mission presents an unparalleled opportunity for upper atmosphere data assimilation. Assimilation of the observed dayglow emissions can be formulated in a similar fashion to lower atmosphere radiance data assimilation approaches using the sensitivity of the Lyman-Birge-Hopfield (LBH) band emission to thermospheric temperature. To demonstrate such an approach, we present a proof-of-concept implementation of an ensemble square-root filter measurement update step using ensemble simulation of the thermosphere and LBH emission by the NOAA’s Whole Atmosphere Model (WAM) and NCAR’s Global Airglow model. With help of a new assimilation approach, the utility of GOLD observations can be extended to reveal the global, time-dependent, altitude-resolved thermospheric structure, offering the key to addressing a number of outstanding questions such as origins of traveling atmospheric disturbances.