Abstract

Abstract. It is generally assumed that horizontal wind velocities are independent of height above the F1 region (> 300 km) due to the large molecular viscosity of the upper thermosphere. This assumption is used to compare two completely different methods of thermospheric neutral wind observation, using two distinct locations in the high-latitude Northern Hemisphere. The measurements are from ground-based Fabry–Perot interferometers (FPI) and from in situ accelerometer measurements onboard the challenging mini-satellite payload (CHAMP) satellite, which was in a near-polar orbit. The University College London (UCL) Kiruna Esrange Optical Platform Site (KEOPS) FPI is located in the vicinity of the auroral oval at the ESRANGE site near Kiruna, Sweden (67.8∘ N, 20.4∘ E). The UCL Longyearbyen FPI is a polar cap site, located at the Kjell Henriksen Observatory on Svalbard (78.1∘ N, 16.0∘ E). The comparison is carried out in a statistical sense, comparing a longer time series obtained during night-time hours in the winter months (DOY 300–65) with overflights of the CHAMP satellite between 2001 and 2007 over the observational sites, within ±2∘ latitude (±230 km horizontal range). The FPI is assumed to measure the line-of-sight winds at a height of ∼240 km, i.e. the peak emission height of the atomic oxygen 630.0 nm emission. The cross-track winds are derived from state-of-the-art precision accelerometer measurements at altitudes between ∼450 km (in 2001) and ∼350 km (in 2007), i.e. 100–200 km above the FPI wind observations. We show that CHAMP wind values at high latitudes are typically 1.5 to 2 times larger than FPI winds. In addition to testing the consistency of the different measurement approaches, the study aims to clarify the effects of viscosity on the height dependence of thermospheric winds.

Highlights

  • Global circulation models (GCM) of the upper atmosphere appear in two forms: climatologies based on empirical measurements, and theoretical models that calculate atmospheric conditions using the principles of physics and chemistry

  • In this paper we show that upper thermospheric winds measured by the challenging mini-satellite payload (CHAMP) satellites are typically 1.5 to 2 times larger than those measured by ground-based Fabry– Perot interferometers (FPIs) at an auroral site and polar cap site

  • Data were chosen from the two 3-year periods 2001–2003 and 2005–2007, when the CHAMP satellite was in orbit

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Summary

Introduction

Global circulation models (GCM) of the upper atmosphere (altitude from 80 to 600 km) appear in two forms: climatologies based on empirical measurements, and theoretical models that calculate atmospheric conditions using the principles of physics and chemistry. The acceleration of the neutral air in 3-D space with respect to the active driver of the plasma motion is important to estimate, for instance, the Joule heating rate, as one of the most important thermal energy inputs This has a knock-on effect on the calculation of the absolute density of the gas, which is an important parameter used in, for example, satellite orbit calculations

The CHAMP accelerometer data
The Fabry–Perot interferometer data
CMAT2 model winds
Results
CHAMP average winds
FPI average winds
Discussion
Considering the molecular viscosity of the upper thermosphere
FPI Doppler shift to wind speed procedure
CHAMP cross-track wind procedure
Comparison with EISCAT radar ion velocities
Conclusions
Full Text
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