Abstract

The dynamics of many models of physical systems depend on the choices of key parameters. This paper describes the results of some observing system simulation experiments using a first-principles model of the Earth’s ionosphere, the Thermosphere Ionosphere Electrodynamics Global Circulation Model (TIEGCM), which is driven by parameters that describe solar activity, geomagnetic conditions, and the state of the thermosphere. Of particular interest is the response of the ionosphere (and predictions of space weather generally) during geomagnetic storms. Errors in the overall specification of driving parameters for the TIEGCM (and similar dynamical models) may be especially large during geomagnetic storms, because they represent significant perturbations away from more typical interactions of the earth-sun system. Such errors can induce systematic biases in model predictions of the ionospheric state and pose difficulties for data assimilation methods, which attempt to infer the model state vector from a collection of sparse and/or noisy measurements. Typical data assimilation schemes assume that the model produces an unbiased estimate of the truth. This paper tests one potential approach to handle the case where there is some systematic bias in the model outputs. Our focus is on the TIEGCM when it is driven with solar and magnetospheric inputs that are systematically misspecified. We report results from observing system experiments in which synthetic electron density vertical profiles are generated at locations representative of the operational FormoSat-3/COSMIC satellite observing platforms during a moderate (G2, Kp = 6) geomagnetic storm event on September 26–27, 2011. The synthetic data are assimilated into the TIEGCM using the Local Ensemble Transform Kalman Filter with a state-augmentation approach to estimate a small set of bias-correction factors. Two representative processes for the time evolution of the bias in the TIEGCM are tested: one in which the bias is constant and another in which the bias has an exponential growth and decay phase in response to strong geomagnetic forcing. We show that even simple approximations of the TIEGCM bias can reduce root-mean-square errors in 1-h forecasts of total electron content (a key ionospheric variable) by 20–45%, compared to no bias correction. These results suggest that our approach is computationally efficient and can be further refined to improve short-term predictions (∼1-h) of ionospheric dynamics during geomagnetic storms.

Highlights

  • The ionosphere is a portion of the Earth’s mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere, corresponding to altitudes from approximately 60–1,000 km, in which interactions with solar radiation create a plasma consisting of neutral and ionized gases with free electrons

  • A general strategy for model bias correction is presented within a data assimilation system for complex and sparsely observed dynamical systems

  • The proposed strategy is applied in observing system experiments corresponding to extreme conditions, in which the geomagnetic storm of September 26–27, 2011 with a global ionospheric circulation model, the TIEGEM

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Summary

Introduction

The ionosphere is a portion of the Earth’s mesosphere, thermosphere, and exosphere, corresponding to altitudes from approximately 60–1,000 km, in which interactions with solar radiation create a plasma consisting of neutral and ionized gases with free electrons. The so-called E and F layers extend, respectively, from altitudes from about 90 to 150 km and from 150 to 500 km. The various layers can reflect, refract, and absorb radio waves at particular frequencies, and for this reason, the ionosphere interferes with satellite communications. The Earth may be bombarded with streams of energetic particles that interact with the ionosphere and Earth’s magnetic field to induce electromotive forces that can extend all the way to the ground, disrupting high-voltage electric transmission grids [1]. For a comprehensive overview of these issues, see the book by Kelley [2]

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