Deriving column-integrated thermospheric temperature with the N2 Lyman–Birge–Hopfield (2,0) band
Autor: | Tomoko Matsuo, Clayton Cantrall |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Geomagnetic storm
Physics Atmospheric Science Daytime Observational error 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Airglow Rotational temperature 01 natural sciences Computational physics Atmospheric radiative transfer codes First principle Joule heating 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Popis: | This paper presents a new technique to derive thermospheric temperature from space-based disk observations of far ultraviolet airglow. The technique, guided by findings from principal component analysis of synthetic daytime LBH disk emissions, uses a ratio of the emissions in two spectral channels that together span the Lyman–Birge–Hopfield (LBH) (2,0) band to determine the change in band shape with respect to a change in the rotational temperature of N2. The benefits of the two-channel ratio approach include an elimination of representativeness error as absolute LBH intensities are not required in the derivation procedure and a reduced impact of systematic measurement error caused by variations in the instrumental performance across the LBH band system as a fully resolved system is also not required. It is shown that the derived temperature should, in general, be interpreted as a column-integrated property as opposed to a temperature at a specified altitude without utilization of a priori information of the thermospheric temperature profile. The two-channel ratio approach is demonstrated using NASA GOLD Level 1C disk emission data for the period of 2–8 November 2018 during which a small geomagnetic storm has occurred. Due to the lack of independent thermospheric temperature observations, the efficacy of the approach is validated through comparisons of the column-integrated temperature derived from GOLD Level 1C data with version 2 of the GOLD Level 2 temperature product as well as temperatures from first principle and empirical models. The storm-time thermospheric response manifested in the column-integrated temperature is also shown to corroborate well with hemispherically integrated Joule heating rates, ESA SWARM mass density at 460 km, and GOLD Level 2 column O / N2 ratio. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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