Abstract

AbstractThe Global‐scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) is a National Aeronautics and Space Administration mission of opportunity designed to study how the Earth's ionosphere‐thermosphere system responds to geomagnetic storms, solar radiation, and upward propagating atmospheric tides and waves. GOLD employs an instrument with two identical ultraviolet spectrographs that make observations of the Earth's thermosphere and ionosphere from a commercial communications satellite owned and operated by Société Européenne des Satellites (SES) and located in geostationary orbit at 47.5° west longitude (near the mouth of the Amazon River). They make images of atomic oxygen 135.6 nm and N2 Lyman‐Birge‐Hopfield (LBH) 137–162 nm radiances of the entire disk that is observable from geostationary orbit and on the near‐equatorial limb. They also observe occultations of stars to measure molecular oxygen column densities on the limb. Here, we provide an overview of the instrument and compare its prelaunch and early flight measurement performance. Direct comparison of LBH spectra of an electron lamp taken before launch with spectra on orbit provides evidence that both cascade and direct excitation are important sources of thermospheric LBH emission.

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