Seasonal and altitude dependence of thermospheric metastable helium
densities measured by fluorescence lidar
Abstract
Airglow originating from metastable helium He(2^3S) at 1083 nm has
been used to study the upper thermosphere since its discovery in 1959,
yielding insights into e.g. solar EUV intensities and thermospheric
photoelectron densities. However, passive airglow measurements are
fundamentally limited, because they represent a vertical integration of
the entire He(2^3S) layer, spanning 100s of km, and because they rely
on solar illumination of the He(2^3S) layer, so temporal changes are
difficult to distinguish from vertical variations. Recently, the first
height-resolved measurements of He(2^3S) density were made by
fluorescence lidar, opening a new window for studying the upper
thermosphere. We report on a series of 51 measurements by this
instrument spanning an entire winter season and extending to an altitude
of 1000 km, revealing a broad He(2^3S) layer that extends to, and
peaks at, higher altitudes than previously expected.