Exploring Thermospheric Variability and Far-Ultraviolet Airglow
Sensitivity: First Results from Ensemble Modeling with the Whole
Atmosphere Model
Abstract
Earth’s thermosphere is driven by a combination of meteorological,
magnetospheric, and solar forcing that exhibits significant variation
from day-to-day. The relative importance of these drivers and their
combined affects in determining daily thermospheric variability on
global and local scales is an important science question particularly
under solar minimum conditions. Far-ultraviolet, satellite-based airglow
observations are a valuable tool to probe the thermosphere and can
provide the spatial coverage and temporal resolution required to improve
our understanding of thermospheric day-to-day variability in response to
driver variability. This paper presents first results from principal
component analysis and ensemble sensitivity analysis to quantify the
major modes of dayglow variability in both OI 135.6 nm emissions and N2
Lyman-Birge-Hopfield emissions and the sensitivity of these modes to
geomagnetic and lower atmosphere drivers. The ensemble simulations are
performed with NOAA’s Whole Atmosphere Model that extends from Earth’s
surface to the exobase and NCAR’s Global Airglow Model for a recent
period with low-to-moderate levels of geomagnetic activity and low solar
activity. The ensemble simulations are compared to thermospheric
observations over the same period by the NASA Global-scale Observations
of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) mission.