Gary Swenson

and 2 more

The climatology of atomic oxygen (O) in the MLT (mesosphere and lower thermosphere) is balanced by O production via photodissociation in the lower thermosphere and recombination in the upper mesosphere. The motivation here is to establish the intra-annual variation in the eddy diffusion coefficients and eddy velocity in the MLT based on the constituent climatology of the region. The analysis method, originally developed in the 60’s (Colegrove et al. 1965), was refined for a study of MLT global inter-annual variations in global mean values (Swenson et al. 2018, 2019, respectively) ,(S19). In the this study, the intra-annual cycle was divided into twenty-six (two-week) periods for each of three zones, the northern hemisphere (NH, 15 to 55 degrees ), southern hemisphere (SH, -15 to -55 degrees ), and the equatorial region (EQ, 15 to -15 degrees ). Sixteen years of SABER O density measurements (2002-2018) and MSIS 2.0 model N , O and T profiles (80-96 km) were determined for each of the periods and zones for determination of O eddy diffusion velocities and fluxes. Atomic oxygen diffusive fluxes ([O]*v, 80-96 km) are balanced by the continuity of chemical loss, but the intra-annual variation of k$_{zz}$ (determined from v ) and [O] are determined separately. The major findings include: 1) A dominant AO below 87 km in the NH and SH zones, with the largest variation in amplitude between winter and summer at 83 km. 2) A dominant SAO at all altitudes (80-96 km) in the EQ zone. 3) Intra-annual variability in the global average [O] and k$_{zz}$ contribute to variability of O eddy transport in the MLT.

Garima Malhotra

and 2 more

The latitudinal and temporal variation of atomic oxygen (O) is opposite between the empirical model, MSIS and the whole atmosphere model, WACCM-X at 97-100 km. The [O] from WACCM-X has maxima at solstices and summer mid-high latitudes, similar to [O] from SABER. We use the densities and dynamics from WACCM-X to drive the Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model (GITM) at its lower boundary, and compare it with the MSIS driven GITM. We focus on the differences in the modeling of the thermospheric and ionospheric semiannual oscillation (T-I SAO). Our results reveal that driving GITM with WACCM-X shifts the phase of T-I SAO to maximize around solstices. Nudging the dynamics in GITM towards WACCM-X, reduces the amplitude of the oppositely-phased SAO but does not completely correct its phase. We find that during solstices, WACCM-X driven GITM has a smaller temperature gradient between the hemispheres and weaker meridional and vertical winds in the summer hemisphere. This leads to accumulation of [O] at lower latitudes due to weaker meridional transport, resulting in solstitial maxima in global means. WACCM-X itself has the right phase of SAO in the upper thermosphere but wrong at lower altitudes. The exact mechanisms that can correct the phase of SAO in IT models while using SABER-like [O] in the MLT are currently unknown and warrant further investigation. We suggest mechanisms that can reduce the solstitial maxima in the lower thermosphere, for example, stronger interhemispheric meridional winds, stronger residual circulation, seasonal variation in eddy diffusion, and momentum from breaking gravity waves.

Loren C. Chang

and 7 more

Equatorial plasma bubbles (EPBs) are elongated plasma depletions that can occur in the nighttime ionospheric F region, causing scintillation in satellite navigation and communications signals. EPBs are believed to be Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities seeded by vertically propagating gravity waves. A necessary pre-condition for EPB formation is a threshold vertical ion drift from the E region, which is required to produce the vertical plasma gradients conducive to this instability. Factors affecting the variation of EPBs therefore include magnetic declination, the strength of the equatorial electojet, and the wind dynamo in the lower thermosphere controlling vertical plasma drifts. In most longitude zones, this results in elevated EPB occurrence rates during the equinoxes. The notable exception is over the central Pacific and African sectors, where EPB activity maximizes during solstice. \citet{tsunoda_jgr2015} hypothesized that the solstice maxima in these two sectors could be driven by a zonal wavenumber 2 atmospheric tide in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere. In this study, we find that the post-sunset electron density observed by FORMOSAT-3/COSMIC during the boreal summer from 2007 - 2012 does indeed exhibit a wave-2 zonal distribution, consistent with results expected from elevated vertical ion drift over the Central Pacific and African sectors. Numerical experiments are also carried out which found that forcing from the aforementioned tidal and stationary planetary wave (SPW) components produced wave-2 modulations on vertical ion drift, ion flux convergence, and midnight TEC. The relation between the vertical ion drift enhancements and the midnight TEC enhancements are consistent with the solstice maxima hypothesis.

Gary R. Swenson

and 6 more

Atomic oxygen (O) in the MLT (mesosphere and lower thermosphere) results from a balance between production via photo-dissociation in the lower thermosphere and chemical loss by recombination in the upper mesosphere. The transport of O downward from the lower thermosphere into the mesosphere is preferentially driven by the eddy diffusion process that results from dissipating gravity waves and instabilities. The motivation here is to probe the intra-annual variability of the eddy diffusion coefficient (k$_{zz}$) and eddy velocity in the MLT based on the climatology of the region, initially accomplished by \citeA{GarciaandSolomon1985a}. In the current study, the intra-annual cycle was divided into 26 two-week periods for each of three zones: the northern hemisphere (NH), southern hemisphere (SH), and equatorial (EQ). Sixteen years of SABER (2002-2018) and 10 years of SCIAMACHY (2002-2012) O density measurements, along with NRLMSIS\textsuperscript{\textregistered} 2.0 were used for calculation of atomic oxygen eddy diffusion velocities and fluxes. Our prominent findings include a dominant annual oscillation below 87 km in the NH and SH zones, with a factor of 3-4 variation between winter and summer at 83 km, and a dominant semiannual oscillation at all altitudes in the EQ zone. The measured global average k$_{zz}$ at 96 km lacks the intra-annual variability of upper atmosphere density data deduced by \citeA{Qian2009}. The very large seasonal (and hemispherical) variations in k$_{zz}$ and O densities are important to separate and isolate in satellite analysis and to incorporate in MLT models.