165 research outputs found
Numerical simulations of the seasonal/latitudinal variations of atomic oxygen and nitric oxide in the lower thermosphere and mesosphere
A 2-Dimensional zonally-averaged thermospheric model and the global University College London (UCL) thermospheric model have been used to investigate the seasonal, solar activity and geomagnetic variation of atomic oxygen and nitric oxide. The 2-dimensional model includes detailed oxygen and nitrogen chemistry, with appropriate completion of the energy equation, by adding the thermal infrared cooling by O and NO. This solution includes solar and auroral production of odd nitrogen compounds and metastable species. This model has been used for three investigations; firstly, to study the interactions between atmospheric dynamics and minor species transport and density; secondly, to examine the seasonal variations of atomic oxygen and nitric oxide within the upper mesosphere and thermosphere and their response to solar and geomagnetic activity variations; thirdly, to study the factor of 7 to 8 peak nitric oxide density increase as solar F sub 10.7 cm flux increases from 70 to 240 reported from the Solar Mesospheric Explorer. Auroral production of NO is shown to be the dominant source at high latitudes, generating peak NO densities a factor of 10 greater than typical number densities at low latitudes. At low latitudes, the predicted variation of the peak NO density, near 110 km, with the solar F sub 10.7 cm flux is rather smaller than is observed. This is most likely due to an overestimate of the soft X-ray flux at low solar activity, for times of extremely low support number, as occurred in June 1986. As observed on pressure levels, the variation of O density is small. The global circulation during solstice and periods of elevated geomagnetic activity causes depletion of O in regions of upwelling, and enhancements in regions of downwelling
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The modelled occurrence of non-thermal plasma in the ionospheric F-region and the possible consequences for ion outflows into the magnetosphere
A global, time-dependent, three-dimensional, coupled ionosphere-thermosphere model is used to predict the spatial distribution of non-thermal plasma in the F-layer. It is shown that, even for steady-state conditions with Kp as low as 3, the difference between the ion and neutral velocities often exceeds the neutral thermal speed by a factor, D', which can be as large as 4. Theoretically, highly non-Maxwellian, and probably toroidal, ion velocity distributions are expected when D' exceeds about 1.5. The lack of response of the neutral winds to sunward ion drifts in the dawn sector of the auroral oval cause this to be the region most likely to contain toroidal distributions. The maximum in D' is found in the throat region of the convection pattern, where the strong neutral winds of the afternoon sector meet the eastward ion flows of the morning sector. These predictions are of interest, not only to radar scientists searching for non-thermal ionospheric plasma, but also as one possible explanation of the initial heating and upward flows of ions in the cleft ion fountain and nightside auroral oval, both of which are a major source of plasma for the magnetosphere
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The influence of anisotropic F region ion velocity distributions on ionospheric ion outflows into the magnetosphere
The contribution to the field-aligned ionospheric ion momentum equation, due to coupling between pressure anisotropy and the inhomogeneous geomagnetic field, is investigated. We term this contribution the âhydrodynamic mirror forceâ and investigate its dependence on the ion drift and the resulting deformations of the ion velocity distribution function from an isotropic form. It is shown that this extra upforce increases rapidly with ion drift relative to the neutral gas but is not highly dependent on the ion-neutral collision model employed. An example of a burst of flow observed by EISCAT, thought to be the ionospheric signature of a flux transfer event at the magnetopause, is studied in detail and it is shown that the nonthermal plasma which results is subject to a hydrodynamic mirror force which is roughly 10% of the gravitational downforce. In addition, predictions by the coupled University College London-Sheffield University model of the ionosphere and thermosphere show that the hydrodynamic mirror force in the auroral oval is up to 3% of the gravitational force for Kp of about 3, rising to 10% following a sudden increase in cross-cap potential. The spatial distribution of the upforce shows peaks in the cusp region and in the post-midnight auroral oval, similar to that of observed low-energy heavy ion flows from the ionosphere into the magnetosphere. We suggest the hydrodynamic mirror force may modulate these outflows by controlling the supply of heavy ions to regions of ion acceleration and that future simulations of the effects of Joule heating on ion outflows should make allowance for it
Storm time polar cap expansion: interplanetary magnetic field clock angle dependence
It is well known that the polar cap, delineated by the openâclosed field line boundary (OCB),
responds to changes in the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF).
In general, the boundary moves equatorward when the IMF turns southward and contracts
poleward when the IMF turns northward. However,
observations of the OCB are spotty and limited in local time,
making more detailed studies of its IMF dependence difficult.
Here, we simulate five solar storm periods with the coupled model consisting of the Open
Geospace General Circulation Model (OpenGGCM) coupled with the Coupled Thermosphere Ionosphere
Model (CTIM) and the Rice Convection Model (RCM),
i.e., the OpenGGCM-CTIM-RCM, to estimate the location and dynamics of the OCB.
For these events, polar cap boundary location observations are also obtained from Defense Meteorological
Satellite Program (DMSP) precipitation spectrograms and compared with the model output.
There is a large scatter in the DMSP observations and in the model output.
Although the model does not predict the OCB with high fidelity for every observation,
it does reproduce the general trend as a function of IMF clock angle.
On average, the model overestimates the latitude of the openâclosed field line boundary
by 1.61â. Additional analysis of the simulated polar cap boundary dynamics across
all local times shows that the MLT of the largest polar cap expansion closely correlates
with the IMF clock angle, that the strongest correlation occurs when the IMF is southward, that
during strong southward IMF the polar cap shifts sunward, and that the polar cap rapidly
contracts at all local times when the IMF turns northward.</p
Modelling of composition changes during F-region storms: a reassessment
A recalculation of the global changes of thermospheric gas composition, resulting from strong heat inputs in the auroral ovals, shows that (contrary to some previous suggestions) widespread increases of mean molecular mass are produced at mid-latitudes, in summer and at equinox. Decreases of mean molecular mass occur at mid-latitudes in winter. Similar results are given by both the `UCL' and `NCAR TIGCM' three-dimensional models. The computed composition changes now seem consistent with the local time and seasonal response observed by satellites, and can broadly account for `negative storm effects' in the ionospheric F2-layer at mid-latitudes.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29311/1/0000375.pd
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